Under fire
Journalists in Honduras work amid a scene of intimidation and death threats
HOUSTON CHRONICLE
Aug. 8, 2010, 9:07PM
In an alarming development over the past few months, a near neighbor of the U.S. has become one of the deadliest nations in the world for journalists.
As documented in a special report for the Committee to Protect Journalists authored by Mike O'Connor, unidentified killers shot seven Honduran broadcast journalists to death in a bloody spree beginning in March. Six occurred in a span of seven weeks.
The CPJ investigation found evidence indicating at least three, and possibly more, of the murders were motivated by the journalists' work. That would make Honduras the second most dangerous place to practice journalism in 2010, exceeded only by Pakistan.
After the military coup last year that ousted leftist president Manuel Zelaya, critics of the regime installed by the military were targeted by uniformed police and anonymous assailants. A U.S. State Department report referred to accounts of arbitrary killings by agents of the de facto regime following the June coup.
Elections last November put conservative Porfirio Lobo in power, but Honduran journalists told CPJ they fear the murders have been conducted with tacit approval of authorities. One of the victims, Channel 5 anchorman Nahúm Palacios, a coup opponent, was slain after the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights ordered the Honduran government to protect his life because of death threats.
As disturbing as the journalists' deaths has been the Honduran government's swift dismissal of the possibility that the victims were killed because of their line of work. Minister of Security Óscar Álvarez told reporters that they were probably street crimes. Adding to the suspicion of government complicity is the fact Álvarez made his statement without providing any supporting evidence and investigators have not apprehended any suspects in the murders.
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