On-duty policeman charged in news photographer's murder
Reporters Without Borders is outraged by the murder of photographer on El Mundo, Jorge Aguirre (photo), in Caracas on 5 April. The journalist was gunned down by a man in uniform during a demonstration against insecurity. The organisation called for possible police implication in the murder to be fully investigated.
Attorney-general Isaías Rodríguez announced yesterday that Boris Blanco Arcia, 33, a former Caracas police officer who was dismissed last October, has been arrested for the murder of El Mundo photographer Jorge Aguirre, who was gunned down in Caracas on 5 April. Blanco was detained after a search of his home turned up pistol cartridges that matched those found at the scene of the shooting. Investigators have not yet found the murder weapon or established the motive. __________________________________________________________ 06.04.06 - Photographer murdered apparently by a police officer during a demonstration
Reporters Without Borders expressed outrage after the murder on 5 April 2006 in Caracas, of Jorge Aguirre, photographer on the daily El Mundo. The journalist was gunned down by a man on a motorcycle dressed as a police officer during a demonstration against insecurity after the murder of three youths. “The press is in its turn paying a high price for the climate of violence exemplified by the recent cases of kidnapping and murder, sometimes implicating the police,” said the press freedom organisation. “Even if it is not yet known whether Jorge Aguirre's killer was a member of the security forces, we hope that the investigation will also probe their ranks,” said Reporters Without Borders, which welcomed reform of the police promised by the government. “Nearly four years after the unresolved murder of another photographer, Jorge Tortoza, this murder should not go unpunished,” it added. The sons of a Lebanese-born Canadian businessman living in Venezuela, Bryan, 17, Kevin,13 and Jason Faddoul, 12, and their chauffeur Miguel Rivas were abducted on the outskirts of Caracas on 23 February. After making an exorbitant ransom demand the kidnappers murdered the three boys and their chauffeur. The case prompted a public outcry and angry demonstrations across the country. The state prosecutor-general, Isaías Rodríguez, told a press conference on 5 April that the investigation would also probe possible police involvement. On the same day, Jorge Aguirre, driven by his chauffeur Julio Canelón in a car bearing the logo of the daily El Mundo, arrived to cover the renovation of a stadium close to the scene of the demonstration. His press vehicle was intercepted by a man dressed as a police officer, whose motorbike had no number plates. Since the policeman did not identify himself the driver did not stop. Aguirre then got out of the car to take some photos. The uniformed man turned back and opened fire, shooting at the journalist three times, hitting him in the upper body. As he fell to the ground, Aguirre managed to take a picture of his fleeing killer (photo). He was taken to the nearby university hospital, where he died of his injury shortly afterwards. Staff of press group Cadena Capriles, which owns El Mundo, were planning to rally at the offices of the Prosecutor-general on 6 April. Around 30 people are currently held hostage for ransom by kidnappers in Venezuela. On 28 March, Italian-Venezuelan Filippo Sindoni, owner of the local daily El Aragüeño and the channel TVS, was abducted and murdered in Maracay, west of Caracas. There too the investigation is focusing on the implication of regional police.