IMPUNITY–ARGENTINA, COSTA RICA, GUATEMALA,
HAITI & DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
WHEREAS
the alleged perpetrators of the murder of Ricardo Gangeme, owner and editor
of El Informador Chubutense of Trelew, Chubut province, Argentina, on May
13, 1999, have been freed for lack of evidence against them and that apart
from the findings in the case the only grounds given by the judges have been
the ballistics test on the bullet, damaged and supposedly subjected to manipulation,
with which he was killed
WHEREAS
despite the fact that President Abel Pacheco de la Espriella asked the judicial
police to speed up the investigation into the murder of journalist Parmenio
Medina on July 7, 2001, in Costa Rica, the murder remains unpunished and the
authorities continue close-mouthed, saying only that a person arrested for
bank holdups is “of special interest” in the investigations, and
the fact that two district attorneys, four investigators and a crime specialist
interviewed more than 100 people, searched 30 homes in a search for the .38
caliber weapon with which the murder was committed and took statements from
75 convicted felons who had been in contact with Medina as he did investigative
reporting on issues of national interest
WHEREAS
the case of the murder of Guatemalan journalist Jorge Mario Alegría
Armendáriz in September 2001 has followed the normal process of investigation
by the Public Prosecutors Office, which has named a special state attorney
to handle the case and bring the guilty to trial
WHEREAS
remaining unsolved are the murders in Haiti of journalists Jean Leopold Dominique
on April 3, 2000, Brignol Lindor on November 3, 2001, and Gerard Denoze on
December 15, 2001, and serious anomalies and obstacles have been noted in
the application of justice
WHEREAS
the investigation into the disappearance in the Dominican Republic of columnist
Narciso Pinales González in May 1994 remains stalled and unsolved
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 government of Argentina to use all means at its command to reactivate
the investigation and solve the murder
to reiterate to the police and judicial authorities
of Costa Rica the need for them to continue the investigations until the crime
is solved and to share with the people of Costa Rica any progress, without
endangering the outcome of their inquiries
to recommend to the attorney general and judicial
authorities of Guatemala that they intensify the investigation and bring those
who masterminded and committed the murder to trial
to demand that the Haitian government complies
with its duty to investigate and punish those responsible for the murder of
journalists, with the aim of putting an end to crimes against freedom of the
press and leading the Haitian people on the road to democracy
to urge the government of the Dominican Republic
to reactivate and follow up the case until those responsible for the crime
are identified and brought to justice.