Pubdate: Thu, 11 Aug 2005 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 2005 The Miami Herald Contact: http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/262 Author: Susana Hayward, Knight Ridder News Service HIT BY DRUG VIOLENCE, PAPERS QUIT PROBING Major Newspapers Along The Northern Border Of Mexico Have Stopped Investigating Drug Wars Because Their Reporters Have Been Killed, Kidnapped Or Threatened NUEVO LAREDO, Mexico - A drug war is ripping apart northern Mexico, but you won't find many details about who's behind it in the local newspapers. Journalists -- after their colleagues have been killed, kidnapped and threatened with death -- have stopped investigating organized crime. "It's the new trend of drug gangs: Journalists are warned, paid off or killed," said Daniel Rosas, the managing editor of the daily El Manana, the oldest newspaper in the border city south of Laredo, Texas. "Drug battles have become bloodier, and gangs have no code of ethics. They don't respect human life; why should they respect reporters?" El Manana, founded in 1932 with a motto to promote freedom of expression, has been censoring itself since its editor, Roberto Javier Mora Garcia, was stabbed to death on March 19, 2004. Earlier this year, a former El Manana reporter, Dolores Guadalupe Garcia Escamilla, died after being shot outside a radio station. She had gone to work for the station and had named officials allegedly involved in the drug trade before she was killed. El Manana now reports only official news, its editors said. Other major newspapers along the northern frontier followed suit after their reporters were killed, kidnapped or threatened. They said corruption, impunity and lack of police support made it almost impossible for journalists to research rampant violence accurately. That means they aren't following up on the 173 people who have disappeared since last fall throughout the state of Tamaulipas, deemed by journalism organizations as the most dangerous place for reporters to work in Mexico. Twenty-three others who are missing are Americans from Texas. There have been at least 108 execution-style killings since January. "We still inform the community of what's happening but are more careful of what we say. It's a painful decision. We are hostages to self-censorship, and it's worse than censorship," said El Manana's publisher, Ramon Cantu Deandar. Cantu, 39, has grown cynical about covering organized crime in this city of nearly half a million people. "What's the point of investigating? We can't win. Drug mafias have billions and billions of dollars. They own this city. They buy police, government officials, investigators, you name it," he said. In the past 18 months, six journalists have been killed along the border: four in 2004 and two in 2005. Two other journalists have been killed elsewhere in Mexico. Their editors regarded the six as hard-core investigators of the prolific violence that erupted in 2003, when the leader of the Gulf cartel, Osiel Cardenas, was jailed, sparking a battle for control of Nuevo Laredo, the largest land port to the United States and the crucial crossing point to Interstate 35, which runs north across the United States to Canada. "We're completely alone in this business. We don't trust any state or federal authorities, and crime keeps on growing. It's more visible, and there's seldom any punishment," said Jorge Morales, the editor of El Imparcial, in the Sonora state capital of Hermosillo, south of Arizona. Mexican and U.S. officials agree the violence stems from efforts by gangs loyal to Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman -- a fugitive drug trafficker based in the state of Sinaloa -- to seize control of Nuevo Laredo from the jailed Cardenas' Gulf cartel, which had controlled the region for years. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth