Arab News

Fear spreads as Mexican journalist­s mourned

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BOCA DEL RIO, Mexico: Grieving, frightened journalist­s remembered three slain colleagues on Friday as young and energetic members of a press corps working under terrifying conditions in a state torn by a war between Mexico’s two most powerful drug cartels.

Traffic dwindled from the streets and shopping areas emptied hours after the discovery Thursday afternoon of Guillermo Luna Varela, Gabriel Huge, Esteban Rodriguez and Irasema Becerra, who had been slain, dismembere­d and stuffed into black plastic bags dumped into a waste canal.

It was a sense of dread familiar to Veracruz, where a cartel battle for control of one of Mexico’s largest ports has spawned horrors such as the slaughter of 35 people dumped on a main highway in rush- hour traffic in September.

The state is a common route for drugs and migrants coming from the south on the way up to the United States. Much of the area around its main port city on the Gulf of Mexico was controlled until last year by the Zetas, a brutal paramilita­rystyle cartel founded by defectors from the Mexican army special forces and known for its gruesome butchery of opponents.

Late Friday, state prosecutor­s said in a statement police had found three oil drums containing human remains along a highway connecting the port city of Veracruz with Xalapa after receiving an anonymous tip. They offered no other details.

Last year, the Zetas’ territory in Veracruz came under assault from the New Generation, a cartel based in the western state of Jalisco and allied with the powerful Sinaloa cartel, which is led by kingpin Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman.

Drug cartels battling for control of smuggling routes often use threats, bribes or both to demand the support of local officials, prison directors and other influentia­l people in the cities they are fighting over. Journalist­s have not been spared.

“We’re living in madness,” a Veracruz newspaper editor told The Associated Press, speaking on condition of anonymity for his safety.

He said Zetas had wanted him to publish news about the killings of Sinaloa soldiers, and the New Generation had pressured him to suppress such reports.

“The Zetas talk to you and tell you not to publish something, and the New Generation talks to you and say, ‘ If this isn’t published, I’ll mess you up.’ So what are we supposed to do?“

He said criminal gangs even had de facto press representa­tives, who e- mailed complete stories for media to publish.

A local television reporter said his cameramen had once been warned off covering a story by the cartels - by a fellow journalist who worked for a gang. He also spoke on condition of anonymity out of fear.

At least seven current and former reporters and photograph­ers have been slain in Veracruz over the last 18 months, forcing their surviving colleagues to work under precaution­s reminiscen­t of those in a war zone.

Journalist­s let colleagues and family know by phone when they are leaving for work and coming home. They call ahead before covering a story to see if the area is safe. Once they go, they move in groups of four or five and scan areas from the vehicle before getting out, remaining in constant contact with their newsroom. Few talk anymore with strangers, a new reticence in an area once known for its tropical warmth and welcoming attitude to tourists and other visitors.

Press freedom groups said all three slain photograph­ers found Thursday had temporaril­y fled the state after receiving threats last year.

Huge, a new father who was in his 30s, and Luna, his 22- year- old nephew, were “part of a new generation of young photograph­ers who permeate the media in Veracruz,” wrote Sandra Segura, a columnist for the newspaper Notiver, where both men had worked. Both had covered the police beat.

“They were all spouses, children, siblings, parents, like Gabriel, the father of a 2- year- old girl. All of them had a future snatched away in an instant,” she wrote.

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