Thursday, August 1, 2013

Journalists work to cover their stories and stay alive


Journalists Work to cover their stories and stay alive

This is the first piece I wrote for International Media support on journalism safety and security issues in Colombia, Honduras and Mexico. 

Staying alive and unharmed is the main concern of journalists in Mexico, Honduras and Colombia. But the sounds of silence of journalists who muzzle themselves as a self-defense mechanism may be as much of a concern.
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That was the consensus of journalists from the three countries who gathered in the northern port city of Barrancabermeja, Colombia in late April for an international forum on Security, Safety and Self-Censorship.

“We have to find ways that journalists can report on sensitive topics without exposing themselves to unnecessary risks,” said Urban Lofqvist, director of  the Swedish chapter of Reporters Without Borders, an organizer of the event.  Other sponsors included Colombia’s Foundation for Press Freedom, or FLIP, the Swedish chapter of Reporters with Borders and IMS. 

Barrancabermeja was an apt spot for the forum; the city has been a historical hot spot for Colombia’s internal conflict and journalists here still feel the heat when they report on violence related to politics or organized crime.

“In Santander, there are cases where journalists do not go into depth in stories about situations that impact the society; when they (might) became targets,” said veteran journalist Diro César Gonzalez, editor and owner of the Barrancabermeja weekly,  “La Tarde.,”  Barrancabermeja is located in the department of Santander.

Gonzalez has been under protective guard from a government security team since 2006, when he first began receiving death threats. He is protected under a Colombia law that reviews the situations of journalists and members of 15 other vulnerable groups, providing bodyguards and bulletproof vehicles for those who need them.

It’s why Gonzalez can hide in plain sight, celebrating his birthday with forum attendees at a local restaurant.  “I love being a journalist and I really don’t know how to do anything else.,“ he said. “Not even being a janitor.”

But his light-hearted remarks don’t mean Gonzalez takes the deadly business of journalism lightly. Colombian journalists may have a slight edge on their colleagues in Honduras and Mexico, because they do get some protection.

Mexico’s legislature just passed a bill that would allow journalists to request federal intervention in attacks against them, and is pending approval by the president.
There is talk, but no action, about similar efforts in Honduras.

At the forum, participants agreed no journalist in Honduras, Mexico or Colombia has it easy. In Mexico, attacks against journalists are so common that many news media no longer run stories about drug cartels. 

The hacked-up bodies of photojournalist Daniel Martinez Balzasua, 22, and another young man, were found April 24 in Saltillo, in northern Mexico, the latest victim of an apparent drug-cartel killing.  Coincidentally, this was the same day the Barrancabermeja forum took place.

The Committee to Protect Journalists said in a February report that 12 Mexican journalists went missing in 2006-2012 and 14 were killed because of their work. Mexico's federal Human Rights Commission says 81 journalists have been killed since 2000.

In Honduras, with the world’s highest homicide rate –  drug gangs also have journalists under the gun.  According to ???? 19 journalists have been killed since 1992, with 15 of those cases never investigated.

“Covering hard issues is a part of my life,” said Xiomara Orellana, who has been an investigative reporter with for Diario La Prensa of  San Pedro Sula, Honduras for eight years., with no intentions of stopping. “One learns to live with danger. The difference is that in Colombia there are some programs that offer protection. We don’t have anything. You survive as you can. You have to live with fear. “

Her colleague, Javier Valdez Cárdenas, a founding reporter for the weekely RioDoce in Sinoloa, Mexico,  says it is important to remember that every deadly incident from the drug cartels impacts people as individuals.

“To just count the dead is to the contribute to people’s problems,” he said. “Talk about people not numbers. We do the journalism that is possible in impossible conditions.”

Colombian journalists  have learned to do this. In the northern Columbia city of Monteria, Ginna Morelo, editor of El Meridiano de Cordoba and her colleague, Nydia Serrano, of the competing El Universal, say threats come regularly. In January, two journalists from another Monteria newspaper had to leave the country after they received death threats from members of a drug gang.

Serrano noted six of the 16 journalists killed in Colombia during the past 20 years were from her home state of Cordoba.  “What’s important now is for the story to get out,” she said. “So for safety, we don’t think about exclusivity anymore, but about sharing the information for our own security.”

Morelo says when she goes into the field  to cover a story she checks in with the town priest and schoolteachers before she makes her rounds so they know she is there.  She is also in constant cell phone communication with her desk.

The number of journalists is killed is down, and the threat, and we feel more secure.,” she said. The statistics are correct, but that’s because we don’t tell about 80 percent of what happens in this country.”

In fact, self-censorship has become the name of the game. A recent survey of 700 journalists in Colombia by the Antonio Narino Project found that 79 percent of them admit to engaging in self-censorship for their physical safety, or even just to keep advertisers happy or to hold onto their jobs.

Colombia’s FLIP has tried to get around the issue by helping journalists to publish their work away form their home turf.  “We work with some local journalists who had a problem with self-censorship,” said Andrés Morales, FLIP executive director.  “Their medium did not publish their work for security reasons.  What we did was create agreements or alliances with national media or other outlets so the work could be published.

I’ve had my own exposure to dangerous times in my days as an international correspondent in Central America. But it was nothing like my colleagues faced then or now this people in the cities and countries that are their home. 

“I’m not saying we don’t run risks, but it is under other conditions,” said Arturo Wallace, a Colombia-based correspondent for the BBC.  I”The political cost of expelling an international correspondent is much higher than taking action against a national journalist.”

International correspondents may be tough, but when the going gets tough, well we get to leave. Not these people, who as Mexico’s Javier Valdez Cárdenas says, continue to do “the journalism that is possible in impossible conditions.”