Pubdate: Sun, 07 Sep 1997 Source: Houston Chronicle, page 31A (http://www.chron.com/cgibin/auth/story/content/chronicle/ world/97/09/07/mexicopresswrap.31.html) Contact: Mexico's Zedillo pledges that he'll pursue inquiry into journalists' deaths By ANDREW DOWNIE MEXICO CITY Over the past nine years, 21 Mexican journalists have been killed, and countless others have been kidnapped, attacked or harassed. The Mexican police, critics charge, have done little to solve the crimes committed against the men and women who report the news, and, they say, federal authorities have made scant efforts to improve the situation. But after meeting last week with Mexican President Ernesto Zedillo and other government and human rights officials, a delegation from the Inter American Press Association expressed hope that the climate here may be changing. "We got the commitment from the president telling us that he will do something," said Ricardo Trotti, an official with the organization whose membership includes nearly 1,400 newspapers from Argentina to Canada. "What we have criticized in the past is political indifference. Right now, we can see (the Mexican government) has committed itself." Ten members of the IAPA, including Tony Pederson, vice president and managing editor of the Houston Chronicle, were in Mexico City last week for a series of meetings that focused in large part on the unsolved killings of two Mexican journalists, one in Baja California state in 1988 and another in Chihuahua state in 1991. The cases are representative of how the others have been mishandled, said Trotti, who attended the meetings. In only one of the two cases, the killing of the coeditor with Tijuana weekly newspaper Zeta, has there been any noticeable progress, said Trotti, and in neither has the mastermind been brought to justice. Tired of the lack of action, the press association's representatives asked Zedillo to order his administration to take control of the cases. Zedillo said he would ask the National Human Rights Commission to further investigate the killings. If the commission finds a federal element to a crime, it can recommend that the case be taken by a federal judge. "The president was very clear that no crime must go unpunished," said presidential spokesman Alejandro Carrillo. Although the human rights commission, which has investigated the cases for several years, has not yet advised the central government to assume responsibility, the IAPA members were nevertheless encouraged that Zedillo appeared keen to listen. The meeting and tone also helped mend fences. Zedillo, unlike his counterparts from Colombia and Guatemala, did not attend a two day gathering of IAPA newspaper executives in Guatemala City in August, at which jurists, politicians and human rights activists poured over the two Mexican cases and four others from Colombia and Guatemala. That absence led some IAPA members to believe the Mexican president did not take the matter seriously enough. The association issued a report calling on governments to improve their records of solving murders of journalists and, if necessary, to appoint special prosecutors to deal with the crimes. "What prompted this meeting was concern that ... Zedillo did not attend," said another of those who met with the president, Earl Maucker, the editor of The SunSentinel of south Florida. "They seemed very concerned. We were very pleased." Others who deal with press freedom issues continued to express pessimism, including those at the New Yorkbased Committee to Protect Journalists. More journalists have been killed in Mexico this year than in any other nation in the Americas, said the organization's Latin American coordinator, Joel Simon. "Mexico is leading the world in terms of the highest number of journalists killed (in 1997)," he said. The violence peaked this summer with the killing of Benjamin Flores, a newspaper editor in San Luis Rio Colorado, a dusty desert town on the border with Arizona. Flores, the director of the newspaper La Prensa, was shot dead July 15 by gunmen later identified as hirelings of a jailed drug trafficker. That slaying was accompanied by the killing of the editor of a small newsweekly in the Pacific Coast state of Guerrero and of a crime reporter for a small Mexico City political magazine. Journalists in Guerrero, Sinaloa and Chihuahua states also reported being harassed, some of them by federal police agents. The Committee to Protect said attacks on reporters in Mexico are expected to exceed the 10 cases documented last year. The one bright spot is the quick reaction in the Flores case, said Simon. State authorities moved quickly to detain the masterminds of the crime, and four men are in jail. That, though, is an exception to the norm, he said. With the nation's judicial system in chaos and resources already stretched to the limit, there appears little hope of a quick turnaround, he said. "I don't see any evidence that these cases in the long run are going to be resolved any more easily than they have been in the past," said Simon. Andrew Downie is a freelance journalist based in Mexico City.