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Midyear
Meeting
Los Cabos
March, 12 - 15, 2004
Mexico
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Country-by-Country Reports
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ARGENTINA
In a country that is slowly recuperating
from the worst social and economic crisis in memory, the media are still far
from showing any improvement.
First of all, when high officials in the president’s office make phone
calls to pressure journalists and media outlets that criticize the government,
it constitutes a serious attack on press freedom.
In recent years, the press has experienced an alarming drop in circulation and
advertising sales as costs have risen because of increases in the price of imported
supplies and equipment after devaluations tripled the cost of the U.S. dollar.
The governments that ruled in this period carried out policies that did not
deal with the situation in a way that would reverse it, but instead imposed
even more rigorous conditions and increased the already stifling tax burden.
In 2000 Economy Minister Domingo Cavallo imposed the value added tax on the
cover price of newspapers and magazines, turning up the heat on a sector that
clearly depends on the domestic market. A rather unorthodox remedy was found
to help journalistic enterprises, the so-called Competitiveness Plans, which
allowed tax compensation between the VAT and employer contributions until March
2003. Then another system was applied that considered employer contributions
as a tax credit to the VAT account. It expired last July, although it remained
in effect because the courts supported an interim relief measure requested by
some newspapers. This is temporary and only affects the newspapers included
in the court order.
In view of this worrisome situation, the Argentine press requests that until
a permanent solution is found the government return to the system that allowed
a tax credit to the VAT account for the amounts paid in employer contributions,
which would address the situation of each company.
Some journalistic enterprises have built up tax debts resulting in court-ordered
attachments or takeovers of their cash assets.
In an unprecedented attempt to apply prior restraint to a newspaper, on February
2, the company that publishes the daily El Tribuno of Salta, Horizontes S.A.,
was notified of a decision by Judge Guillermo Félix Díaz imposing
restrictions on its reporting about a court case that had shaken the community.
The decision came in response to a request by the lawyer of Francisco José
Álvarez, who had been tried and later acquitted for murdering bus driver
José Antonio Morales in 1994. The case was highly publicized. The daily
El Tribuno carried news and opinions about it.
In his ruling, Judge Díaz said that the newspaper “should abstain
from using expressions, sentences, phrases or words that could affect the presumption
of innocence of the party or publish his photograph.” The ban extends
to “news stories, commentaries—signed or unsigned—or referring
in any way to the facts that were investigated” in the case. Failure to
comply with the ruling would involve a “warning sentence” of 5,000
pesos in each case.
The Argentine press firmly rejected this measure, since it constitutes an attempt
at censorship that violates Article 14 of the National Constitution and Article
13 of the American Convention on Human Rights, which prohibit censorship of
any type.
Since the renewal of democracy in 1983, the murder of photographer José
Luis Cabezas of the magazine Noticias in the resort city of Pinamar on January
25, 1997, was a serious attack on press freedom. In an exemplary trial, those
responsible for the crime were convicted and received harsh prison sentences.
Unfortunately last November 13, the Buenos Aires provincial criminal appeals
court decided to reduce the sentences. Under legislation that gives double credit
for time served before all appeals are exhausted, some of the prisoners could
be released at the end of this year.
Because of a damage award to the Mayor Ricardo Peirone of Rafaela, Santa Fe,
the printing plant of the daily Castellanos was attached for $45,000.
Peirone said he was insulted in several news stories the newspaper published
about an event that allegedly conflicted with the ethics of his job. The mayor
requested and obtained a preventive attachment for the amount of his claim.
The judge applied it to the newspaper’s presses.
In December 2003, cameraman Federico Torres and reporter Alejandro Vargas, correspondents
of Channel 9 of Resistencia, were shot with rubber-clad bullets while they were
covering a demonstration by city workers in Corrientes.
In San Cosme, Corrientes, people trying to take over a cattle ranch pushed a
mobile unit of the newspaper Época into a ravine and forced photographer
Miguel Fleitas to leave as police stood by without intervening.
Jorge Ríos, Cintia Olmedo and Julán Ríos of the cable channel
of Conscripto Bernardis were attacked by a group of people under the direction
of provincial senator-elect Luis Luna while they covered a traffic blockage
on Route 127.
Reporter Damián Carreras and cameraman David Barud of Teleocho Noticias
of Córdoba were attacked when they tried to interview Jorge González
Segura, vice dean of the School of Exact Sciences of the National University
of Córdoba.
José María Delloro, a photographer for the agency Télam,
was attacked during a confrontation between unemployed people and police in
Neuquén. Delloro, who was hit on the head by a tear gas grenade, was
taken to a clinic.
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