Eight journalists on new paramilitary hit list

“Los Urabeños,” a paramilitary military group that is on the Reporters Without Borders list of “Predators of press freedom,” has threatened eight journalists with various media in the cities of Cali and Buenaventura, in the northern department of Valle del Cauca. The journalists are named in message that was sent to them on 28 September, four days after two other journalists were threatened in a similar manner by the criminal gang known as “Los Rastrojos.” It accuses them of reporting false information about the arrest of a member of “Los Urabeños,” describes them as “military targets” and gives them 24 hours to leave their respective cities. The eight journalists are Gildardo Arango, the director of Noticiero Más Pacifico, Yesid Toro of El País and Q'hubo, Darío Gómez of Radio Caracol, Álvaro Miguel Mina of Radio Q'hubo, Henry Ramírez of Noticias Uno, Christian Mauricio Abadía of Red + Noticias, Oscar Gutiérrez of Radio Buenaventura and Julio Cesar Bonilla of the Voces del Pacífico community TV station. “We urge the authorities to provide protection to the journalists threatened by this paramilitary group,” said Reporters Without Borders deputy programme director Virginie Dangles. “The authorities must take this kind of intimidation seriously and must confront the increase in threats against journalists in Colombia.” The Office of the Defender of the Colombian People, a national body created to promote human rights, said it has knowledge of 98 cases of journalists being threatened since the start of 2014, 51 more than the number of cases reported last year. Although the number of journalists being murdered has fallen sharply since the start of the previous decade, Colombia is still Latin America’s second deadliest country for media personnel. Colombia is ranked 126th out of 180 countries in the 2014 Reporters Without Borders press freedom index. 26 September 2014 Press release : TWO JOURNALISTS NAMED BY PARAMILITARY ORGANIZATION Colombian journalists Leiderman Ortiz Berrio and Edgar Astudillo are among threatened by the paramilitary organization “Los Rastrojos” in a hit list circulated on leaflets in the city of Montería, in the northern department of Córdoba. “If you continue with your political, pro-union, pacifist, leftist proselytizing against our organization, you will pay the price,” the leaflet says. “Our patience has its limits.” “Los Rastrojos” has threatened Ortiz Berrio and Astudillo as “agitators.” The two journalists are among 24 people named on the list, which also includes political leaders and activists. This form of threat is a terror tactic long employed by Colombian paramilitaries and drug traffickers. Many journalists have been treated as “military targets” by these criminal gangs. Ortiz Berrio is the editor of La Verdad del Pueblo, a weekly newspaper that reports on corruption and violence in the Bajo Cauca region of northern Colombia. He has been the target of repeated threats. In 2010, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights requested that the Colombian government provide him with protection. He has kept on living in Caucasia, in Antioquia department, but travels in an armoured car, protected by three bodyguards. Astudillo, the other threatened journalist, also receives government protection. In 2009, he reported extensively on “Los Paisas,” a criminal gang. He left Montería, the capital of Córdoba, under threat. Having returned in 2011, he now runs a program on a local broadcaster, Radio Panzenú. “Reporters Without Borders urges the government to thoroughly investigate the publication of the hit list and to take action against those responsible for this new terror campaign in northern Colombia,” said Camille Soulier, head of the organization’s Americas desk. “The government must go beyond providing protection – undeniably necessary though that is – and take systematic action against impunity in order to guarantee the safety of journalists who risk their lives daily to inform the public on sensitive issues.” Ortiz Berrio demanded that the National Protective Unit re-evaluate measures taken to safeguard his family as well as dozens of other threatened journalists. He recently attended the funeral of a colleague, journalist Luis Carlos Cervantes, who was murdered in Antioquia on 12 August. A paramilitary group, Los Urabeños, was the alleged perpetrator. Colombia ranks 126th of 180 counties in the 2014 Reporters Without Borders world press freedom index.
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Updated on 20.01.2016