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Midyear Meeting
March, 21 - 24, 2003
Radisson Plaza Hotel
San Salvador
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| Country-by-Country
Reports |
Guatemala
Press freedom has deteriorated considerably despite the fact that the independent
press has been strengthened because of its firm stance against government harassment.
President Alfonso Portillo has become the most severe critic of the press, trying
to discredit it constantly with statements impugning its credibility. Other
high officials do the same, including Vice President Francisco Reyes; the president
of Congress, Efraín Ríos Montt; and Attorney General Carlos de
Léon.
The president went so far as to threaten editors. In response José Rubén
Zamora, editor of elPeriódico, filed a preliminary complaint against
him. The Supreme Court accepted the action and Congress had to name a commission
to investigate the case.
Officials of the public prosecutor’s office have admitted unofficially
that some journalists’ telephones are tapped, specifically those the government
constantly accuses of conspiracy, just because they publish reports on corruption,
organized crime and behind-the-scenes power groups in the governing party, the
FRG.
Government intimidation also includes restrictions on reporters covering public
events, including a resumption of the practice of taking pictures of journalists
covering official events. This was done during the period of repression against
the press, from 1978 to 1983, when the highest number of murders of journalists
occurred.
In December and January, the public prosecutor’s office summoned journalists
in an intimidating way to confirm in court reports published in their newspapers.
Representatives of elPeriódico refused to respond in order to guarantee
the protection of their sources.
The government has found that taxation can be a form of harassment. All of the
main newspapers have been audited by the Tax Authority (SAT) which have overstepped
its limits. Nuestro Diario, the newspaper with the highest circulation, has
been harassed by auditors. It filed a request for relief in a court which ruled
in its favor.
The newspapers have accepted the audits without complaint in compliance with
the law. At the same time they reject and denounce any act that exceeds the
limit of the law establishing the Tax Authority.
In February, two journalists, Elizabel Enríquez of the agency Cerigua,
and Marielos Monzón, a columnist for Prensa Libre, were attacked under
circumstances that have not been explained. Other columnists have reported receiving
telephone threats.
Despite the campaign to discredit the media, their credibility has increased
and circulation is going up.
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Copyright © 2003 Inter American Press Association.
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