Los Angeles Times

Mexican media go dark to protest killing of reporters

- By Kate Linthicum kate.linthicum@latimes.com Twitter: @katelinthi­cum Cecilia Sanchez in The Times’ Mexico City bureau contribute­d to this report.

MEXICO CITY — Several prominent Mexican news outlets went dark Tuesday to protest the murder of journalist­s across the country, including Monday’s brazen midday killing of veteran crime reporter Javier Valdez.

The “Day Without Journalism” protests were staged by publicatio­ns across Mexico, where at least five journalist­s have been gunned down this year and where few perpetrato­rs are brought to justice.

On Tuesday, reports emerged of yet another attack, this time against a magazine executive in the state of Jalisco.

Sonia Cordova, an executive at the weekly Semanario Costeno and the wife of the magazine’s publisher, was wounded and her 26-yearold son killed Monday night when a gunman besieged them in the city of Autlan, the state prosecutor’s office said. Cordova remained hospitaliz­ed, the office said.

“In Mexico, journalist­s are killed because they can be, because nothing happens,” read the text Tuesday on the home page of Animal Politico, one of Mexico’s most influentia­l online news publicatio­ns. Instead of its normal content, the site published a black page featuring photos of Valdez and other journalist­s killed this year. Several other major news outlets did the same.

In Mexico City on Monday night, journalist­s marched in the streets and scrawled “In Mexico they are killing us” in front of the Angel of Independen­ce monument. Vigils were planned in several states on Tuesday evening.

Since 2000, at least 125 journalist­s have been killed in Mexico, according to the National Human Rights Commission, the government’s independen­t watchdog.

The deadly risks of reporting on drug cartels or government corruption have led many publicatio­ns to self-censor and others to shut down. Reporters who continue to pursue hardhittin­g stories often must employ bodyguards or take other extraordin­ary security measures.

The death of Valdez, who had been internatio­nally recognized for his work and who last year published a book about the challenges of practicing what he called “narco-journalism,” sent shock waves through Mexico’s media community.

Valdez, a correspond­ent for the Mexico City-based daily La Jornada and a cofounder of the regional weekly Riodoce, was shot dead on a busy road in broad daylight in the city of Culiacan.

Alejandro Sicairos, a cofounder of Riodoce, said in a radio interview Tuesday that he is sure that organized crime ordered the attack, dismissing a suggestion by a local prosecutor that Valdez may have been killed in an attempted carjacking.

“We don’t know who ordered it and who carried it out, but we do know that organized crime is directly responsibl­e for this,” he said.

He said Valdez died because he had tirelessly documented rising violence in the state of Sinaloa, where the sons of Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman have been fighting other groups for control of the Sinaloa drug cartel in the months since Guzman, the cartel’s founder, was extradited to the U.S.

The bloody conflict has helped drive violence across Mexico, which is on track to record more homicides in 2017 than any year since the government began releasing such statistics in 1997.

“There is unstoppabl­e violence in Sinaloa,” Sicairos said. “Journalism is in the middle of this crossfire.”

In the interview, Sicairos pleaded with the leaders of organized crime to respect journalist­s’ role as messengers of informatio­n. “We give accounts of events, but we have nothing to do with them,” he said.

Tania Montalvo, the editor of Animal Politico, said journalist­s in her newsroom decided Monday afternoon to stage a Day Without Journalism protest after they learned of Valdez’s death.

“It was a moment to do something, to say, ‘Enough is enough,’ ” she said.

Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto, who has been criticized for not speaking out more forcefully after other journalist­s were slain, sent a Twitter message Monday denouncing the killing of Valdez: “I reiterate our commitment to freedom of expression and press, fundamenta­l to our democracy.”

But media advocates say authoritie­s are not doing nearly enough to protect freedom of expression in Mexico, which last year was named by Reporters Without Borders as the thirdmost deadly country for journalist­s, after Syria and Afghanista­n.

 ?? Hector Vivas Derecho a Informar ?? JOURNALIST­S WROTE “In Mexico they are killing us” and “No to silence” at the Angel of Independen­ce monument in Mexico City. Since 2000, at least 125 journalist­s have been killed in the country, officials say.
Hector Vivas Derecho a Informar JOURNALIST­S WROTE “In Mexico they are killing us” and “No to silence” at the Angel of Independen­ce monument in Mexico City. Since 2000, at least 125 journalist­s have been killed in the country, officials say.

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