Showing posts with label Inter-American Press Association. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Inter-American Press Association. Show all posts

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Daily Headlines: October 24, 2013


* Argentina: A spokesman for Monsanto denied allegations made in an Associated Press published Monday claiming that the firm’s Roundup line of pesticides is harming the health of Argentinians.

* Latin America: The Inter-American Press Association denounced numerous dangers against media freedoms in Latin America including the killing of journalists, a new censorship law in Ecuador and restrictions on advertising in Argentina.

* Haiti: Protests took place in the Haitian capital of Port-au-Prince in order to support recently arrested lawyer and government critic André Michel.

* Mexico: 26-year-old Mexican boxer Francisco "Frankie" Leal died of brain trauma three days after he was knocked out by countryman Raul Hirales in a televised bout.

Video Source – YouTube via user Latinoamerica Teamo (In September 2012, protesters gathered in the Argentine city of Cordoba to march against Monsanto).

Online Sources- ESPN; Huffington Post; Miami Herald; MercoPress

Friday, May 6, 2011

Press group “condemns” media member deaths in Peru, Brazil

The Inter-American Press Association (IAPA) called on the full investigations on the deaths of two journalists that ironically occurred on World Press Freedom Day.

“We are deeply concerned by these new crimes that on our exact day of celebration shock and underscore the fact that this is a risky profession,” said IAPA president Gonzalo Marroquín in a press release by the group. Robert Rivard, head of the IAPA’s Committee on Freedom of the Press and Information, urged officials in Peru and Brazil to “promptly investigate in order to determine the motives and bring the perpetrators and masterminds to justice.”

On May 3rd, Brazilian journalist Valério Nascimento was gunned down in front of his house in Rio de Janeiro state while Peruvian radio host Julio Castillo Narváez was killed by four unknown gunmen as he was eating in a restaurant. Both men had recently denounced corruption by local officials; in the case of Castillo Narváez, he received numerous death threats on his cell phone and he sought police protection.

The murder of Castillo Narváez comes amid a contentious presidential election between Ollanta Humala and Keiko Fujimori. Both candidates have pledged not to infringe on the rights of the press if elected to the presidency. Fujimori promised that she would not have “close ties to media owners” similar to that of her father, disgraced and imprisoned ex-president Alberto Fujimori. Humala also alluded to the ex-leader, when said that if he were elected he would not act “like in the 1990s when...(the press) was mistreated and stepped on.”

According to one leading Peruvian press group, members of the media have faced their share of difficulties:
A total of 82 attacks were committed against Peruvian journalists in the first four months of 2011 (almost one every 36 hours) according to a report prepared by…the National Association of Peruvian Journalists…

Acts of physical aggression and verbal attacks lead with 37 cases, followed by threats and harassment (17) and administrative pressure/layoffs (15).
Meanwhile, an IAPA delegation was in Argentina this week to investigate what supporters of the country’s largest circulation newspapers, Clarin and La Nacion, claimed infringements on the press. The administration of President Cristina Fernandez contends that it’s necessary to break up the media monopolies in order to diversify the press.

Image- RPP (Collection of several of the main Peruvian dailies).
Online Sources- Inter-American Press Association, EFE, Univision.com, France24, El Comercio, La Republica, Cronica Viva, Canadian Press,

Monday, March 31, 2008

LatAm press freedoms “under threat” says IAPA

The freedom of press in numerous Latin American countries is “under threat”, according to the Inter-American Press Association (IAPA). The IAPA conference cited the governments of Cuba and Venezuela for detaining journalists and increasing restrictions against the press, respectively. Yet the IAPA also highlighted other countries for not ensuring full liberties to the media:

The IAPA statement singled out the United States for trying to erode a reporter's right to source confidentiality, noting court "cases where federal judges force journalists to reveal their sources and impose heavy fines on them."
The IAPA meeting also issued a resolution against the growing number of unsolved murders and kidnappings of journalists in Argentina, Honduras, Haiti, Mexico and Colombia, whose governments it urged to investigate "quickly and thoroughly."

The IAPA conference was in the Venezuelan capital of Caracas where a parallel forum was also held denouncing the supposed conspiracy between regional media and “the corporate elite.”

Sources- BBC News, International Herald Tribune, caribbeannetnews.com, Voice of America

Image- BBC News