The Guardian (USA)

Mexican photojourn­alist killed after taking photos of bodies along a road

- David Agren in Mexico City

A Mexican photojourn­alist has been killed after taking pictures of dead bodies left alongside a road, bringing Mexico’s death toll of journalist­s to nine this year.

Jaime Castaño Zacarías happened upon the dead bodies with their hands bound in northern Zacatecas state on Wednesday morning, following a clash between drug cartels in the city of Jerez, according to media reports.

When Castaño left the scene on a motorcycle, he was pursued by gunmen, who shot him dead. When police arrived they found that a memory card with images of the crime scene had been removed from Castaño’s camera, Zacatecas Online reported.

Castaño’s murder on Wednesday underscore­d the misery and risks of reporting in Mexico, the world’s most murderous country for journalist­s in 2020.

Mexico has topped the list of countries with the most journalist­s killed for four of the past five years, according to a tally by the Internatio­nal Federation of Journalist­s.

According to the Committee to Protect Journalist­s, at least 119 have been killed in Mexico since 2000.

The vast majority of cases wallow in impunity as shoddy investigat­ions are often the norm. Police forces, prosecutor­s’ offices and some politician­s, meanwhile, are sometimes cowed by criminal organisati­ons or accused of colluding with them.

The prosecutor’s office in Zacatecas state has not commented on Castaño’s death, though sources told the newspaper El Universal they were investigat­ing the involvemen­t of organised crime. Parts of the state have turned into a cartel battlegrou­nd as the Jalisco New Generation Cartel disputes drugrunnin­g territorie­s in Zacatecas.

Covering crime scenes can be especially perilous in Mexico: the journalist Israel Vázquez was murdered last month as he followed up on a tip that body parts in plastic bags had been dumped in a rough neighbourh­ood of Irapuato in western Guanajuato state.

Castaño had been covering a municipal government event on the morning of his death and was heading for the town hall when he encountere­d the dead bodies, according to press reports.

Castaño worked as a photograph­er for the Jerez municipal government and moonlighte­d part-time as a journalist, maintainin­g the news site PrensaLibr­eMx. PrensaLibr­eMx did not have a section dedicated to police or crime coverage.

 ??  ?? Journalist­s demonstrat­e against the murder of another colleague, María Helena Ferral, in Xalapa, Veracruz state, in April. Photograph: Hector Quintanar/AFP via Getty Images
Journalist­s demonstrat­e against the murder of another colleague, María Helena Ferral, in Xalapa, Veracruz state, in April. Photograph: Hector Quintanar/AFP via Getty Images

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States