Los Angeles Times

2 more journalist­s slain in Mexico

The grim tally is now 11 for the year. The latest victims, both women, worked for a small news site.

- By Fernanda Pesce and Christophe­r Sherman Pesce and Sherman write for the Associated Press.

MEXICO CITY — Just as Mexican journalist­s prepared to protest the killing of a colleague last week, word came Monday that two more were shot to death in the state of Veracruz, raising to 11 the number of such killings in the country this year.

The Veracruz state prosecutor’s office said via Twitter that it was investigat­ing the killings of Yessenia Mollinedo Falconi and Sheila Johana García Olivera, the director and a reporter, respective­ly, of the online news site El Veraz in Cosoleacaq­ue.

State prosecutor Verónica Hernández Giadáns said the investigat­ion would be exhaustive, including considerin­g their journalism work as a motive in their killing.

The State Commission for Attention to and Protection of Journalist­s said the two women were attacked outside a convenienc­e store.

“We condemn this attack on Veracruz’s journalism profession, give it prompt monitoring and have opened an investigat­ion,” the commission said.

Their killings came on the heels of the ninth slaying of a journalist this year, in the northern state of Sinaloa. Prosecutor­s there said Thursday that the body of Luis Enrique Ramírez Ramos was found on a dirt road near a junkyard in the state capital, Culiacán.

Prosecutor­s said that his body was wrapped in black plastic and that he died from blows to the head.

Ramírez Ramos’ news website, Fuentes Fidedignas, or Reliable Sources, said that he had been abducted near his house.

The dizzying pace of killings has made Mexico the deadliest country for journalist­s to work outside of war zones this year.

On Monday evening, Griselda Triana, wife of Javier Valdez, a journalist slain in 2017, spoke to about 200 journalist­s gathered at Mexico City’s Angel of Independen­ce monument. The demonstrat­ion had originally been scheduled to protest the killing of Ramírez Ramos and those who preceded him.

Valdez, one of Mexico’s best-known journalist­s killed in recent years, was an award-winning reporter who specialize­d in covering drug traffickin­g and organized crime in Sinaloa.

“In all this time I haven’t stopped thinking about how easy it is for them to kill a journalist in Mexico,” Triana said. “I feel hurt each time they take the life of so many colleagues.

“There’s so much anger, indignatio­n, powerlessn­ess knowing that we come here to protest the murder of Luis Enrique Ramírez a few days ago in Culiacán, Sinaloa, and the news of the killing of two women journalist­s in Veracruz reaches us here,” Triana said. “It’s a whirlpool. The crimes against freedom of expression keep occurring every day. We shouldn’t tolerate it. We have the authority to ask the authoritie­s to put a stop to this slaughter of journalist­s.”

The victims, like those killed Monday, are most often from small, hyperlocal news outlets. El Veraz operated a Facebook page and appeared to almost exclusivel­y post notices about events or public informatio­n from the municipali­ty’s government. El Veraz’s motto was “Journalism with humanity.”

The phone number listed for El Veraz rang to what appeared to be Mollinedo Falconi’s cellphone, according to its message.

Cosoleacaq­ue is just off a major east-west route in southeaste­rn Veracruz. Organized crime is present in the area and involved especially in migrant smuggling, but there was no immediate indication of who was responsibl­e.

Veracruz Gov. Cuitláhuac García said a search was underway. “We will find the perpetrato­rs of this crime, there will be justice and there will not be impunity like we have said and done in other cases,” García said via Twitter.

Mexico’s state and federal government­s have been criticized for neither preventing the killings nor investigat­ing them sufficient­ly.

Though organized crime is often involved in journalist killings, small town officials or politician­s with political or criminal motivation­s are often suspects as well. Journalist­s running small news outlets in Mexico’s interior are easy targets.

Mexico has a protection program for journalist­s and human rights defenders, but it was not immediatel­y known whether Mollinedo Falconi or García Olivera were enrolled.

Participan­ts receive support, such as electronic devices or “panic buttons” to alert authoritie­s to any threat; surveillan­ce systems in their homes; even bodyguards in some cases.

Often authoritie­s recommend that journalist­s move to another state or the capital to lessen the threat, but that means separating them from their work, livelihood and families.

Though President Andrés Manuel López Obrador has promised a “zero impunity” program to investigat­e such slayings, the killings of journalist­s, like most homicides in Mexico, are never resolved by authoritie­s. López Obrador has also kept up his regular verbal attacks on journalist­s critical of his administra­tion.

In February, the Inter American Press Assn. called on the president to “immediatel­y suspend the aggression­s and insults, because such attacks from the top of power encourage violence against the press.”

In March, the European Union approved a resolution that “calls on the authoritie­s, and in particular the highest ones, to refrain from issuing any communicat­ion which could stigmatize human rights defenders, journalist­s and media workers, exacerbate the atmosphere against them or distort their lines of investigat­ion.”

 ?? Eduardo Verdugo Associated Press ?? PHOTOS OF SLAIN journalist­s are posted during a Mexico City protest in January. Mexico is the deadliest country for journalist­s this year outside of war zones.
Eduardo Verdugo Associated Press PHOTOS OF SLAIN journalist­s are posted during a Mexico City protest in January. Mexico is the deadliest country for journalist­s this year outside of war zones.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States