San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

INTELLECTU­AL GROUP: MEXICAN PRESIDENT HURTS PRESS FREEDOM

Hundreds sign open letter critical of acts by Lopez Obrador

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador denied Friday that his administra­tion has hurt freedom of expression in Mexico, as claimed this week in an open letter signed by hundreds of people, including dozens of wellknown intellectu­als.

The group objected to Lopez Obrador’s frequent accusation­s that those who disagree with him are “frivolous” or have financial or ideologica­l ties to private interests or conservati­ve groups.

The president has publicized some media outlets’ lucrative deals with past administra­tions, calling them wasteful. But the intellectu­als say the tone of the attacks has damaged press freedom.

Lopez Obrador said Friday he has not censored anyone and does not intend to do so.

“We are not going to censor anybody, we are not going to persecute anybody. They are always going to have all their freedoms guaranteed,” Lopez Obrador said of the signers of the letter.

But at the same time, he added, “this group always supported neoliberal policies and now they feel offended, when what they should be doing is apologizin­g for having stood by and done nothing while the country was looted.”

The letter claims that “freedom of expression is under siege in Mexico, and with that, democracy is threatened.”

“President Lopez Obrador uses the rhetoric of stigmatizi­ng and defaming those who he calls his adversarie­s,” the letter continues. “This offends the public, degrades public discourse and debases the office of the presidency, which should use the language of tolerance.”

The group also cited government legal threats against media outlets, though there has been only one big case. In August the government announced a fine of $45,000 against a magazine that has long been critical of Lopez Obrador, and it banned federal agencies from advertisin­g in the magazine for two years.

The federal comptrolle­r’s office argued the magazine presented false documentat­ion while trying to get paid for a public health promotiona­l ad that a previous administra­tion ran in the magazine in 2018. Press groups called the fine excessive, noting the magazine billed less than $3,000 for the ad.

Jan-albert Hootsen, the Mexico representa­tive of the Committee to Protect Journalist­s, said the president’s verbal volleys are concerning.

“Expression­s that stigmatize are very damaging for freedom of expression and the incentive to commit violence against journalist­s and intellectu­als is large,” Hootsen said.

Hootsen noted that 15 journalist­s have been killed in Mexico since Lopez Obrador took office on Dec. 1, 2018. In the six years of the previous administra­tion, 39 were killed.

“This administra­tion is not carrying out the kind of direct censorship that was done under previous administra­tions, and that is good,” Hootsen said. “But violence against the press is at the same level, or higher.”

 ?? MARCO UGARTE AP ?? Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador at a news conference in July.
MARCO UGARTE AP Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador at a news conference in July.

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