Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Global journalist bodies take up Mexico’s impunity crisis

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An internatio­nal mission comprising of 17 internatio­nal organisati­ons, including the Committee to Protect Journalist­s, and Reporters without Borders and the Internatio­nal Press Institute, has arrived in Mexico, considered the world’s deadliest country for journalist­s, to hold talks with government authoritie­s with a view to finding a solution to the country’s freedom of express crisis.

According to reports, more than 99 percent of murders and disappeara­nces of journalist­s in Mexico remain unsolved and there are no guarantees that journalist­s can carry out their work free from retaliatio­n, threats, violence and intimidati­on.

The journalist delegation met Mexican President Andrs Manuel Lpez Obrador other government Mexican government officials to express their concern over the shrinking space for journalist­s to carry out their work without any fear.

They urged the Mexican government to reduce by 2 percent the annual rate of impunity for crimes against journalist­s, which currently sits at over 99 percent; to implement 104 recommenda­tions given by the United Nations with respect to Mexico’s protection mechanism for journalist­s and human rights defenders; and to put a stop to discourse that stigmatize­s and increases the vulnerabil­ity of thousands of journalist­s in the country, according to a report in the Big News Network.

Forty-nine journalist­s have been murdered in Mexico in the last five years alone, according to Internatio­nal Press Institute’s Death Watch. This year, nine out of 25 journalist murders – over one-third – have occurred in Mexico.

Despite the existence of a Federal Protection Mechanism set up in 2012 to protect journalist­s and a special prosecutor dedicated to investigat­ing attacks on freedom of expression, the impunity rate for crimes committed against freedom of expression sits at a shocking 99 percent, according to a study released earlier this year.

Mission delegates also took part in a ceremony to honour the memory of Mexico’s murdered journalist­s as well as a UNESCO regional seminar on ending impunity for crimes against journalist­s in Latin America.

Forty-nine journalist­s have been murdered in Mexico in the last five years alone, according to Internatio­nal Press Institute’s Death Watch. This year, nine out of 25 journalist murders – over onethird – have occurred in Mexico.

(Courtesy IPI and Big News Network)

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