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News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: Web: My story: Victim of drug traffickers
Title:UK: Web: My story: Victim of drug traffickers
Published On:2000-06-09
Source:BBC News (UK Web)
Fetched On:2008-09-03 20:01:20
MY STORY: VICTIM OF DRUG TRAFFICKERS

Guillermo Cano, editor of one of Colombia's leading newspapers, El
Espectador, was assassinated by drug traffickers in Colombia 13 years ago,
following a powerful and persistent campaign against drugs in his newspaper.
His widow, Ana Maria Busquets, tells her story:

"The dramatic assassination of my husband changed not just my life and that
of my family, but that of the country as well.

"There was nothing to stop the drug-traffickers doing what they liked.

"Guillermo was a kind of prophet when it came to predicting the impact that
drug trafficking would have on Colombian society. Just like he said, people
got used to making easy money, they got used to impunity.

"The drug traffickers were able to do what they wanted. It wasn't enough to
kill my husband. They threatened my family and constantly attacked the
offices of the newspaper. When my children took over the management of the
paper they received death threats and had to leave the country with their
families for a few months.

"The day that one of them returned to Colombia, there was a huge bomb
explosion at the newspaper. At the same time, the traffickers were
threatening any company who wanted to run advertising in our paper. This led
to huge financial losses and we had to sell up.

Peaceful man

"Guillermo was the first independent journalist to be attacked by the
drug-traffickers. He was widely respected as a professional and as a man,
and I guess we thought that they wouldn't dare attack him in the way they
did.

"We were aware of the risks but we did not think that they would take his
life. He hadn't taken precautions. I don't even think he would have accepted
them.

"There were never any weapons in our home, he detested them. He never
thought that arms could be more powerful than words. He believed
passionately in freedom of speech and in fighting anything that threatened
it. He saw drug traffickers as a major threat to openness and honesty.

"Did we learn anything from my husband's death? I hope so.

"Every year on 3 May, Unesco presents an award to honour freedom of speech.
This award carries my husband's name: Guillermo Cano."

Interview by BBC Mundo
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