IMPUNITY–COLOMBIA
WHEREAS
the vast majority of legal proceedings in cases of crimes against journalists
remain in the early stages of evidence-gathering, with few results as to the
identity of those who committed the crimes and those who masterminded them,
in particular in the cases of murdered journalists Gerardo Bedoya (in Cali,
Valle del Cauca, March 21, 1997), Jairo Elías Márquez (in Armenia,
Quindio, February 10, 1997) and Ernesto Acero Cadena (in Armenia, Quindio,
December 12, 1995)
WHEREAS
the Colombian Attorney General’s Office, responding to a request from
the IAPA and aware of a rise in attacks on journalists and of the importance
that they do not go unpunished, increased the number of state attorneys assigned
to the Investigative Unit for Crimes Against Journalists and extended its
range of action to the national level
WHEREAS
the Colombian Attorney General’s Office has carried out an investigation
that led to conviction of the perpetrator of the murder of journalist Orlando
Sierra Hernández in Manizales on January 30, 2002
WHEREAS
the Specialized Criminal Circuit of Barranquilla acquitted, after a trial
lasting more than a year, the person alleged to have committed the murder
of journalist Carlos Lajud Catalán on March 19, 1993, and the public
prosecutor appealed the acquittal
WHEREAS
since January 2002 the Colombian Attorney General’s Office has filed
notice of appeal of the acquittal by the Specialized Criminal Circuit Court
of Valledupar of the alleged perpetrators of the murder of journalist Guzmán
Quintero Torres
WHEREAS
the Supreme Court determined that the crime against journalist Jaime Garzón
on August 13, 1999 in Bogotá was a terrorist act, and therefore, special
courts should handle the trial
WHEREAS
in the past six months four journalists have been murdered and there has been
an increase in threats to journalists that have gone unpunished, with investigations
into them so far producing no results
WHEREAS
in the face of the climate of intimidation a number of news media have had
to cease operations in such places as Arauca, Caquetá and Cesar
WHEREAS
Principle 4 of the Declaration of Chapultepec declares that “freedom
of expression and of the press are severely limited by murder, terrorism,
kidnapping, intimidation, the unjust imprisonment of journalists, the destruction
of facilities, violence of any kind and impunity for perpetrators. Such acts
must be investigated promptly and punished harshly”
THE IAPA GENERAL ASSEMBLY RESOLVES
to urge the Colombian Attorney General’s Office to review the status
of cases being handled by the Crimes Against Journalists Investigative Unit
to determine why they are moving ahead so slowly and to obtain swifter results
to express its pleasure at the decision, which it hopes
may put an end to the impunity that surrounds so many cases of the murder
of journalists and ensure a level of seriousness in the investigations in
order to uncover those responsible for the violations of press freedom
to express its pleasure at the course of the investigation
but request that this effort lead to those who masterminded the murder of
the managing editor of the newspaper La Patria
to urge the High Court of Barranquilla to review the proceedings
and heed the arguments of the appellants and to call on the Public Prosecutors
Office to continue seeking to identify those who carried out this murder
to urge the judge of the 7th Special Court in Bogotá
to guarantee the transparency of the trial and convict those guilty of the
crime
to call upon the authorities to effectively handle investigations
into threats to journalists through state attorneys specializing in that area
and to urge the news media to train their journalists and give them protection
in armed conflict zones, guaranteeing them rotation in their areas of coverage
and sources of information
to urge the Colombian government to take steps to safeguard
them in their work in every corner of the nation, he news media to unite in
a demonstration of protest and repudiation and the judiciary to punish those
responsible for intimidation and censorship.