News (Media Awareness Project) - Mexico: Mexican Journalist Is Killed |
Title: | Mexico: Mexican Journalist Is Killed |
Published On: | 2007-04-07 |
Source: | Los Angeles Times (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-12 08:46:43 |
MEXICAN JOURNALIST IS KILLED
ACAPULCO -- The local correspondent for Mexico's top television news
network was shot to death late Friday, the latest in a wave of
journalist killings that has made this country one of the most
dangerous for reporters in the Western Hemisphere.
Televisa's Amado Ramirez was shot by two men who were waiting for him
at his car after his radio show, state security official Felipe Flores
said. He died on the steps of the nearby Hotel California as he tried
to escape. Televisa confirmed the death on its nightly broadcast.
The shooting happened on the outskirts of Acapulco's busy central
plaza, which was packed with tourists and hundreds of people attending
a Good Friday Mass at the resort's cathedral. No one else was injured.
The gunmen escaped, and the motive for the killing was not
clear.
Ramirez had covered Acapulco for Televisa for more than a dozen years,
reporting on crime, politics and a host of other issues.
His radio program Friday focused on criticizing leftist Guerrero state
Gov. Carlos Zeferino Torreblanca for refusing to give his second
state-of-the-state address in front of the legislature. The governor
instead chose to give his report in written form.
The Miami-based Inter American Press Assn. has reported at least seven
journalists slain in Mexico since October on orders from drug gangs.
Two others have disappeared.
ACAPULCO -- The local correspondent for Mexico's top television news
network was shot to death late Friday, the latest in a wave of
journalist killings that has made this country one of the most
dangerous for reporters in the Western Hemisphere.
Televisa's Amado Ramirez was shot by two men who were waiting for him
at his car after his radio show, state security official Felipe Flores
said. He died on the steps of the nearby Hotel California as he tried
to escape. Televisa confirmed the death on its nightly broadcast.
The shooting happened on the outskirts of Acapulco's busy central
plaza, which was packed with tourists and hundreds of people attending
a Good Friday Mass at the resort's cathedral. No one else was injured.
The gunmen escaped, and the motive for the killing was not
clear.
Ramirez had covered Acapulco for Televisa for more than a dozen years,
reporting on crime, politics and a host of other issues.
His radio program Friday focused on criticizing leftist Guerrero state
Gov. Carlos Zeferino Torreblanca for refusing to give his second
state-of-the-state address in front of the legislature. The governor
instead chose to give his report in written form.
The Miami-based Inter American Press Assn. has reported at least seven
journalists slain in Mexico since October on orders from drug gangs.
Two others have disappeared.
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