President Duarte calls opposition media "enemy of the country"

Reporters Without Borders deplored President Duarte's attack on the the opposition media and said such behaviour by Latin American leaders was becoming a bad habit.

Reporters Without Borders today deplored the “outrageous” charge by President Nicanor Duarte Frutos that opposition media were “enemies of the country” and expressed concern about growing intimidation of local media outlets in the run-up to national elections due next April. Duarte charged that the opposition media wanted to “destroy the future of our country and the dreams of our citizens” when he inaugurated low-cost housing in the eastern town of Guarambaré on 12 November. Two journalists of the daily ABC Color were threatened by officials of the ruling Colorado Party last month for printing criticism of politicians. The party has been in power for the past 60 years. The worldwide press freedom organisation said Duarte, like Colombian President Alvaro Uribe and Bolivian President Evo Morales, was making the media a scapegoat because it criticised the government. “Free elections mean the public is free to criticise politicians and can never be used, under the pretext of democratic legitimacy, to obstruct the media in its job of reflecting public opinion,” it said. Duarte accused media owners of “amassing their fortunes by exploiting workers” and said they prospered the more they “sucked the blood of the people.” A candidate for the governorship of the southern province of Caaguazú, Francisco Alvarenga, who has a reputation for violence, threatened last month to kill the ABC Color correspondent in Coronel Oviedo, Carlos Mariano Godoy. Alvarenga phoned the journalist and warned that if he was not a candidate he would have tracked him down and shot him, saying it was easy for him to kill someone and that he would get even with Godoy, who had written about him in a series of profiles of candidates with bad reputations. The paper's correspondent in San Lorenzo, near Asunción, Aldo Benítez, was threatened for the same reason by the mayor of Piribebuy, Cayo González, brother of defence minister Roberto González, and parliamentary candidate Víctor González. Frutos, elected in 2003, is constitutionally barred from standing again at the 20 April elections next year.
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Updated on 20.01.2016