Local TV journalist gunned down in north, motive almost certainly linked to work
Organisation:
Reporters Without Borders condemns the murder of Héctor Francisco Medina Polanco, 35, the host of a news programme on provincial TV station Omega Visión, who died in a hospital in the northern city of San Pedro Sula yesterday from the gunshot injuries he had received the day before.
Medina was shot twice in the chest and once in the arm by two men on a motorcycle who followed him to his home in Morazán, a town outside the nearby city of El Progreso. He was almost certainly killed in connection with his work as a journalist. In his TV programme, he often criticized irregularities in the Morazán municipal government and referred to land disputes involving the region’s cattle farmers.
The serious reprisals to which Honduran journalists are exposed when they dare to cover disputes over the use of farm land have been highlighted of late by the persecution of community radio stations Radio Faluma Bimetu (Radio Coco Dulce) and La Voz de Zacate Grande.
Medina had received threats as a result of the views he had expressed on agricultural issues. On 3 May (World Press Freedom Day), Reporters Without Borders added the powerful Honduran businessman landowner Miguel Facussé Barjum to its list of “Predators of Press Freedom.”
“It will be hard to celebrate National Day of the Journalist on 25 May if the persecution of community radio stations and news media opposed to the June 2009 coup d’état continues at the same frenetic pace, especially in the San Pedro Sula region, where there have been several cases in recent days,” Reporters Without Borders said.
“The rule of law continues to disintegrate. We are still awaiting results in the investigations into the 10 murders of journalists last year (in three of which there was a probable or proven link to the victim’s work). We hope it will not be the same with the investigation into this murder.
“While offering our condolences to Medina’s family and colleagues, we would like to issue a reminder of the three challenges Honduras must address: the fight against impunity for the murders of journalists and human rights activists, an overhaul of broadcasting and telecommunications legislation, and rendering justice in a transparent manner for the most serious abuses since the coup d’état.”
Reporters Without Borders added: “Honduras should not be readmitted to the Organization of American States (from which it was suspended after the coup), without offering anything at all in return.”
Published on
Updated on
20.01.2016