News (Media Awareness Project) - US TX: Editorial: Drug Terror Silences Mexican Media |
Title: | US TX: Editorial: Drug Terror Silences Mexican Media |
Published On: | 2010-08-05 |
Source: | Dallas Morning News (TX) |
Fetched On: | 2010-08-06 03:01:26 |
DRUG TERROR SILENCES MEXICAN MEDIA
Northern Mexico continues its descent into chaos. If any doubt remains
about which side is winning the country's drug war, go ask a Mexican
journalist in Nuevo Laredo to explain it.
Can't find one? That's probably because they're hiding and refuse to
receive visitors at their newspaper and television offices. Cartel
informants are interspersed among their staffs, so nobody dares speak
openly about what they know. Another possibility is to pick up a
newspaper and read all the articles about rampant drug violence in
Nuevo Laredo.
Can't find those articles? That's because publishers have been
terrorized into self-censorship by drug gangs and no longer are
willing to risk reprisal by publishing stories that shine a negative
light on the thugs. "We are under their complete control," a veteran
reporter told The Washington Post.
Last month, four Nuevo Laredo journalists were abducted while covering
protests outside a prison whose guards had armed prisoners and let
them out at night to conduct attacks against rival drug groups. The
journalists' captors demanded that television networks broadcast video
statements by men who, under apparent duress, said they worked for the
Zetas drug gang, one of several vying for control of lucrative
smuggling routes into the United States.
The networks complied, marking a new milestone in which the drug
terrorists had not merely silenced the media but actually dictated the
news they report.
"Mexican authorities cannot allow criminal groups to control the flow
of information. Citizens' right to free expression and the stability
of Mexican democracy are both at stake," says Carlos Lauria, of the
U.S.-based Committee to Protect Journalists.
That's the warning this newspaper sounded long ago as Mexico's
violence took a sharp departure from old Mafia-style drug hits and
instead began resembling the kinds of beheadings, torture, kidnappings
and other terrorist tactics used by al-Qaeda.
It's no coincidence that this is happening just on the opposite side
of the border from where Interstate 35 begins its path from Laredo
through San Antonio, Austin, Dallas and other major cities. American
drug consumers are funding this rampage of death, which has cost
25,000 Mexicans their lives since 2006.
Make no mistake: This is terrorism, and the groups behind these
actions have directly threatened American lives and U.S. national
security. Under U.S. law, they should be placed on the State
Department's list of foreign terrorist groups, which would seriously
raise the ante for anyone conspiring with them to smuggle money and
weapons southward or drugs northward across the border.
This country can no longer ignore our role in the terror spreading
across Mexico. American illicit drug users supply the funding, while
the rest of us act like it's not our problem. Meanwhile, northern
Mexico's fragile free press slowly fades into extinction.
[sidebar]
July marked one of the most violent months yet for Mexican journalists
covering the drug war. Major incidents included:
- - Kidnapping and subsequent release of four journalists outside Nuevo
Laredo
- - Kidnapping of newspaper editor in Zacatecas
- - Torture and killing of a radio journalist in Montemorelos, Nuevo
Leon
- - Shooting death of newspaper reporter in Chihuahua
- - Grenade attack on Televisa bureau in Nuevo Laredo
- - Beheading threat that forced Ciudad Juarez television reporter to
seek refuge in El Paso
SOURCES: Reporters Without Borders and Committee to Protect
Journalists
Northern Mexico continues its descent into chaos. If any doubt remains
about which side is winning the country's drug war, go ask a Mexican
journalist in Nuevo Laredo to explain it.
Can't find one? That's probably because they're hiding and refuse to
receive visitors at their newspaper and television offices. Cartel
informants are interspersed among their staffs, so nobody dares speak
openly about what they know. Another possibility is to pick up a
newspaper and read all the articles about rampant drug violence in
Nuevo Laredo.
Can't find those articles? That's because publishers have been
terrorized into self-censorship by drug gangs and no longer are
willing to risk reprisal by publishing stories that shine a negative
light on the thugs. "We are under their complete control," a veteran
reporter told The Washington Post.
Last month, four Nuevo Laredo journalists were abducted while covering
protests outside a prison whose guards had armed prisoners and let
them out at night to conduct attacks against rival drug groups. The
journalists' captors demanded that television networks broadcast video
statements by men who, under apparent duress, said they worked for the
Zetas drug gang, one of several vying for control of lucrative
smuggling routes into the United States.
The networks complied, marking a new milestone in which the drug
terrorists had not merely silenced the media but actually dictated the
news they report.
"Mexican authorities cannot allow criminal groups to control the flow
of information. Citizens' right to free expression and the stability
of Mexican democracy are both at stake," says Carlos Lauria, of the
U.S.-based Committee to Protect Journalists.
That's the warning this newspaper sounded long ago as Mexico's
violence took a sharp departure from old Mafia-style drug hits and
instead began resembling the kinds of beheadings, torture, kidnappings
and other terrorist tactics used by al-Qaeda.
It's no coincidence that this is happening just on the opposite side
of the border from where Interstate 35 begins its path from Laredo
through San Antonio, Austin, Dallas and other major cities. American
drug consumers are funding this rampage of death, which has cost
25,000 Mexicans their lives since 2006.
Make no mistake: This is terrorism, and the groups behind these
actions have directly threatened American lives and U.S. national
security. Under U.S. law, they should be placed on the State
Department's list of foreign terrorist groups, which would seriously
raise the ante for anyone conspiring with them to smuggle money and
weapons southward or drugs northward across the border.
This country can no longer ignore our role in the terror spreading
across Mexico. American illicit drug users supply the funding, while
the rest of us act like it's not our problem. Meanwhile, northern
Mexico's fragile free press slowly fades into extinction.
[sidebar]
July marked one of the most violent months yet for Mexican journalists
covering the drug war. Major incidents included:
- - Kidnapping and subsequent release of four journalists outside Nuevo
Laredo
- - Kidnapping of newspaper editor in Zacatecas
- - Torture and killing of a radio journalist in Montemorelos, Nuevo
Leon
- - Shooting death of newspaper reporter in Chihuahua
- - Grenade attack on Televisa bureau in Nuevo Laredo
- - Beheading threat that forced Ciudad Juarez television reporter to
seek refuge in El Paso
SOURCES: Reporters Without Borders and Committee to Protect
Journalists
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