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News (Media Awareness Project) - US TX: 'I'm Scared for My Life': Televisa Cameraman Seeks Asylum in US
Title:US TX: 'I'm Scared for My Life': Televisa Cameraman Seeks Asylum in US
Published On:2010-09-15
Source:El Paso Times (TX)
Fetched On:2010-09-18 15:00:18
'I'M SCARED FOR MY LIFE': TELEVISA CAMERAMAN SEEKS ASYLUM IN US

A Mexican journalist who was allegedly kidnapped by members of the
Sinaloa drug cartel and then released is seeking political asylum in
the United States.

Alejandro Hernandez Pacheco, a cameraman for the Televisa network, and
three other members of the Mexican media were kidnapped in July in
Gomez Palacio, Durango. They were held captive for almost a week,
allegedly tortured, starved and beaten. Their captors also threatened
to kill them if their television stations didn't air videos that
threatened Los Zetas, a rival drug cartel based in Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas.

Hernandez Pacheco said he and his family have asked U.S. officials for
asylum with the help of El Paso attorney Carlos Spector. Spector
declined to say where Hernandez Pacheco and his family are living.

U.S. immigration officials said they are unable to confirm they've
received an asylum request from Hernandez Pacheco and his family.
During a news conference Tuesday, Hernandez Pacheco said he no longer
felt safe in Mexico, especially after government officials presented
the captives at a large news conference after their release and
declared that the Sinaloa cartel, led by Joaquin "Chapo" Guzman, was
responsible for the kidnapping.

Spector, who is helping three other journalists seeking asylum, said
Hernandez Pacheco is asking for asylum on the grounds that, as a
journalist, he has been persecuted in Mexico, where government
officials "can't and won't protect him."

Hernandez Pacheco said that after the Mexican government hosted the
news conference, officials further made him and his fellow captives
targets of the warring drug cartels.

"My family and I aren't comfortable there (in Mexico). I'm scared for
my life," Hernandez Pacheco, who has been a journalist for about 17
years. "They hung us on a cross. I'm proud to be Mexican, but you
can't work under those conditions, and I'm scared."

On July 26, Hernandez Pacheco and Televisa reporter Hector Gordoa
Marquez traveled to Gomez Palacio to report on the arrest of Cereso
prison director Margarita Rojas, who was accused of releasing
prisoners at night to carry out cartel-ordered assassinations. The
report had been scheduled to air on a Mexican television program,
"Punto de Partida," a few days later.

After leaving the prison, the two men were carjacked, bound,
blindfolded and taken to a home with two other kidnapped journalists.
The men were allegedly tortured, and their captors threatened to kill
them if they didn't call their bosses and demand that they air the
cartel's videos.

Some TV outlets complied, but the producers of "Punto de Partida"
refused to air the videos. Instead, they made a brief statement about
the kidnappings and then broadcast a blank screen.

Hernandez Pacheco said that after about a week in captivity, his
captors ordered the men into a car, drove them to another area and set
them free in the same Gomez Palacio neighborhood where they were held
captive.

"I don't know why they freed us. When they moved us, I thought they
were going to kill us," he said. "They told us to run, and about three
blocks away we saw federal police officers."

Hernandez Pacheco said his initial instinct was not to trust the
officers. Hours after their release, police told the men they were
going to be flown by helicopter to meet with Mexican President Felipe
Calderon and be hailed as heroes. Instead, they were met by dozens of
cameras from Mexican and international media organizations.

"I felt used," Hernandez Pacheco said.

Spector said the men weren't offered food, showers or medical care by
the Mexican government, which held the men for almost a month.

"The federal government responsible for protecting him used him and
put him in danger," Spector said.

Hernandez Pacheco said he left Mexico last month with the clothes he
wore and some documents, including his laser visa. His wife and
children left Mexico a few days later. His family is also seeking asylum.

Spector said it could take months, if not years, to find out whether
the U.S. will grant asylum to Hernandez Pacheco and his family, but
Hernandez Pacheco can apply for a work permit in five months.

"If you have a job for me in five months, let me know," Hernandez
Pacheco jokingly told reporters at Tuesday's news conference.

Spector said Hernandez Pacheco and his family will have to wait two
months to learn whether the U.S. government will grant them asylum. If
their application is denied, then they can fight the decision in
court, which may take two years or more.
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