Pubdate: Sept 8, 1998 Source: International Herald-Tribune Contact: http://www.iht.com/ Author: Molly Moore, Washington Post Service DANGEROUS TIMES FOR MEXICO'S WRITERS MEXICO CITY---For nine months, Homero Aridjis, a Mexican poet and international spokesman for freedom of expression, has not stepped out of his house without the bodyguards that shadow him everywhere: to poetry readings, to lunch with friends, to walk his dog. Now, the telephone warnings that prompted the Mexican government to assign guards to the president of PEN International, a global writers' organization, have escalated with new and more chilling death threats that reflect a pattern of increasing violence against Mexican writers and journalists. "Despite the enormous political opening in the last two years, it is still extremely dangerous to be a journalist in Mexico," said Jorge Zepeda, presldent of the Society of Journalists, one of two new Mexivan watchdog organizations recently created to assist journalists and publicize attacks against them. Many journalists argue that it is the growing independence and power of the Mexican media, fed partly by reforms in Mexico's one-party political system, that have provoked the surge in attacks and threats against journalists and photographers in the past two years. Once largely pawns of the govemment, many newspapers and magazines are professionalizing their staffs and pursuing aggressive investigations of drug cartels and official corruption. In the last 16 months, four journalists have been killed in Mexico in job-related slayings. Scores have been attacked, threatened or intimidated, making the period one of the most violent for journalists here in a decade, according to the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists. In 1997, threats against joumalists were up 55 pereent over the previous year with 187 assaults, threats and acts of intimidation, a Mexican group, Network for the Protection of Journalists, reported. The attacks have been waged by drug cartels, corrupt law enforcement officials and old-style political bosses, according to Mr. Zepeda, who said his organization was attempting to "convince Mexican society that an attack against a journalist is an attack against the whole society and its right to he well-informed." Many of the attacks appear to have been related to the journalists' aggressive reporting. Benjamin Flores Gonzalez. editor of the newspaper La Prensa in San Luis Rio Colorado, on the U.S. border, was shot and killed on the front steps of his office in July, the target of drug traffickers angered by his unflinching coverage. A Mexico City joumalist was murdered last year and five others abducted, reportedly by police officers who resented their coverage of corruption. The authorities have made few arrests. The telephone threats received by Mr. Aridjis, one of Mexico's best-known writers and a frequent government critic, have been particularly troubling to journalistic organizations hecause of his high-profile position as president of PEN International, the prestigious London-bascd organization of poets, novelists and othel writers. "Homero Aridjis becomes a lightning rod because of his visibility," said Joel Simoll of the Committee to Protect Journalists. The New York-based PEN American Center wrote in a letter last week to President Ernesto Zedillo of Mexico: "We suspect that whoever is behind these calls is trying to inhibit Mr. Aridjis's activities as a writer, International PEN president, and an editorial page columnist." "Previous threatening phone calls also occurred within weeks of a public appearance by or press interview wih Mr. Aridjis regarding human rights in Mexico and contemporary dangers faced by writers," it added. - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry