Los Angeles Times

In Mexico, yet another killing of a journalist

Veracruz slaying is at least the second one of a reporter this year.

- By Kate Linthicum kate.linthicum @latimes.com Twitter: @katelinthi­cum

MEXICO CITY — An independen­t Mexican journalist who reported on politics and crime was shot dead Wednesday night in the violent coastal state of Veracruz, one of the world’s most dangerous places for journalist­s, with 22 slain there since 2000.

Leobardo Vazquez Atzin, who previously wrote for a local newspaper and recently launched an independen­t news page via Facebook, was killed outside his home in the municipali­ty of Gutierrez Zamora, state authoritie­s said. Vazquez, 42, was shot by assailants on a motorcycle. No suspects have been arrested in the case.

He is at least the second Mexican reporter slain this year in a nation that ranks among the deadliest for journalist­s. In 2017, journalist­s were killed here at a rate of about one a month. Dozens of others came under threat and went into hiding or fled the country.

The largest number of killings has taken place in Veracruz, which press freedom advocates call a “zone of silence” because many reporters there practice selfcensor­ship to stay alive. In Veracruz, with a population of half a million people — about the size of Wyoming — nearly two dozen journalist­s have been killed in the last 18 years. Reporters and photograph­ers from the state have been slain at holiday parties, their bodies dismembere­d and dumped in canals; some have been tracked down and killed after going into hiding in other parts of the country.

Human rights advocates argue that Veracruz officials, and Mexican officials more broadly, have not done enough to protect journalist­s under threat and have not prioritize­d investigat­ions into their killings. In Mexico, just 10% of journalist killings have resulted in conviction­s, according to the National Human Rights Commission.

On Thursday, press freedom advocates complained that the state attorney general’s office in Veracruz was not taking the case seriously because it released a statement dismissing Vazquez as a former journalist working as a food vendor.

Although Vazquez apparently did operate a taco stand, “his Facebook page clearly indicates that he was very active as a citizen reporter,” said Jan-Albert Hootsen, Mexico representa­tive for the Committee to Protect Journalist­s.

“His death,” Hootsen said, “is yet another sign that the conditions for journalist­s in Veracruz simply haven’t improved.”

In a statement about Vazquez, the Veracruz State Commission for Attention and Protection of Journalist­s implored police to “consider his journalist­ic activity as the principal line of investigat­ion.”

Press advocates have fought to bring attention to the issue, holding protests, suspending publicatio­n for a day and frequently reminding audiences that journalist­s in Mexico are as likely to die as those working in wartorn Syria. But while they have won added protection­s, including safe houses for journalist­s under threat, those haven’t made a dent in preventing killings. Despite pleas from the United Nations and U.S. Ambassador Roberta Jacobson, top officials here haven’t made the issue a priority.

This week, Mexican journalist­s reacted angrily after one of Latin America’s leading intellectu­als said the increase in killings of reporters is a sign that press freedom is improving in a country that had been under oneparty rule for seven decades.

“The fact that more than 100 journalist­s were murdered is in great part to be blamed on the freedom of the press today, which allows journalist­s to say things that were not permitted before,” Peruvian Nobel laureate Mario Vargas Llosa said Monday. He blamed the increase in such killings on “narcotics traffickin­g.”

Vargas was criticized for blaming journalist deaths on criminal groups, when studies have shown that it is public officials — law enforcemen­t officials and political leaders — who have been behind the majority of threats to journalist­s.

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