Pubdate: Tue, 07 Sep 1999 Source: Associated Press Copyright: 1999 Associated Press Author: Mark Stevenson, Associated Press Writer MEXICAN JOURNALIST RUNS INTO TROUBLE ATTACKING BIG-TIME TARGET MERIDA, Mexico (AP) -- His voice still booms when he denounces the government, and he still favors the guayabera shirts he wore while reporting on Central American guerrilla wars and during a decade of exile in Cuba. The leftist insurgencies he made a career covering may be in decline, but journalist Mario Menendez has never had trouble finding a cause. His attitude is reflected in the name of his latest newspaper, the 40,000-circulation daily Por Esto! -- That's Why! So at age 62, Menendez is locked in a battle with the director of Mexico's largest bank, whom he accuses of forcing poor fishermen from their land on the Caribbean coast to build a beach-front empire -- and, with little hard evidence, of smuggling drugs. It's the kind of David-and-Goliath struggle Menendez thrives on. "I'm the only publisher in Mexico who has to walk around with a court injunction in his shirt pocket," Menendez said, proudly displaying the document that bars his arrest on libel charges filed by the banker. Taking on the big boys, and championing the little guys, has long been Menendez's passion. After starting his career at his grandfather's Yucatan newspaper in 1958, Menendez left to work for news magazines in the mid-1960s to report on a story that few were covering at the time: the beginnings of guerrilla wars in Guatemala, where landless Indians were rebelling against centuries of oppression. "We were on an official tour of Guatemala with the Mexican president. After the tour, someone slipped us cards that said, `You've seen one side of Guatemala, now you should see the other,"' he recalled. Menendez was the only reporter who accepted the rebels' invitation. He spent a month living with the incipient guerrilla movement -- whose fight grew into a full-scale civil war -- and he still shows off the poignant pictures he took of child rebels. Menendez was expelled from Colombia a couple of years later for reporting on leftist guerrillas there. Then, in the politically tumultuous times of 1968, he founded a magazine that would land him in jail in Mexico-- Por Que? (Why?). On Oct. 2 of that year, Menendez was standing on a balcony overlooking Mexico City's Tlatelolco plaza when soldiers opened fire on student protesters. Most Mexican newspapers, controlled or intimidated by the government, quashed the story, and to this day, no one knows how many hundreds of students were killed. But Por Que? published graphic photos of the massacre, and printed stories saying top government officials -- not the army -- had ordered the killings. Memoirs of a former defense secretary published this past June appear to support the magazine's contention. The massacre fueled small leftist guerrilla movements in Mexico, and the government became increasingly nervous. By February 1970, Menendez was under arrest on charges of sedition and thrown into a dreaded Mexico City jail known as "the Black Palace" along with dozens of political prisoners. The government later destroyed his printing presses and closed his magazine. In November 1971, a group of leftist guerrillas kidnapped a Coca-Cola distributor in the southern state of Guerrero. In return for the businessman's release, they demanded the government free some political prisoners, including Menendez. Within days, Menendez was hustled onto a Mexican military plane and secretly flown to Cuba. His passport was confiscated and he was told not to return to Mexico. For the next 10 years, he worked for the Cuban government news agency and as a philosophy professor in Havana. Friends in Mexico finally won him permission to return home in 1981. Menendez laid low in the Yucatan provincial capital of Merida until his father, also a journalist, told him it was time to start a newspaper. Por Esto! was born in 1991, and it hasn't stopped punching. In its fifth year, the newspaper began what has turned out to be its fiercest crusade -- reporting on what Menendez contends is land-grabbing and drug smuggling on Mexico's Caribbean coast by Roberto Hernandez, chief executive officer of the Banamex banking company. Bobby Settles, Hernandez's U.S. partner in a 22-mile beachfront empire, says he and his partner are victims of a smear campaign. He says they bought up the properties "to preserve the ecosystem down there." Hernandez declined to be interviewed, but his lawsuit alleges Menendez has made "baseless accusations ... exposing him to ridicule." The story of Hernandez's Caribbean peninsula, and what it is used for, involves some of Latin America's thorniest social issues: the power of money and political influence, geographical remoteness and the powerlessness of the poor. When members of a fishing cooperative showed up at Menendez's paper to complain that the banking magnate was trying to take their land, the editor promised to help. "I told them: `You have my word of honor. We won't back off this story,"' Menendez said. He sent reporters to the secluded coast -- reachable only by boat or airplane -- where Hernandez and the fishermen were struggling over property rights. The reporters found packages of cocaine washed up on the banker's beaches, alongside outboard motor-oil cans marked that they were made in Colombia, which is the source of drugs moving via Mexico's Caribbean coast to the United States. Menendez had seen enough, and rushed to press with a story under the banner headline: "Roberto Hernandez, Drug Trafficker." The response was swift. A government-owned paper company cut off his supply of newsprint, forcing him to import paper from the United States, and Hernandez went to court. In addition to the libel charge, Hernandez's lawyers asked the government to revoke the newspaper's permit under a little-used law requiring Mexican papers "to respect private life, public peace and morality." The Interior Ministry eventually rejected the request. Hernandez accused the fishermen of making up the story because they want legal title to land they have traditionally used as fishing camps. His lawyers said he uses the beachfront properties for sports fishing and has no control over what the tide washes up on his beaches. While Menendez appears to have little hard evidence to support the allegations of drug smuggling by Hernandez, he seems to have touched a nerve with the land-grabbing stories. Hernandez has built the 22-mile stretch of beachfront properties on the most isolated stretch of the Caribbean by buying out neighbors, or -- in the case of the fishing cooperative -- forcing them out with lawsuits. An American woman, who requested anonymity out of fear for what she called "the Hernandez mafia," said she was pressured by Settles to sell a beachfront property at a fraction of its worth. In a telephone interview from her new home in the United States, she said Settles suggested that if she didn't sell, she would face serious legal trouble, possibly including drug-smuggling charges, which she said she assumed meant that narcotics could be planted on her property. She sold in 1996. Settles denied pressuring her. "We're the big boys on the block, and I'm sure that we can be intimidating without ever trying to be," he said. While reporting in Por Esto! on the court cases against him, Menendez is taking the newspaper in new directions. Por Esto! has begun sending reporters to Mayan Indian towns with names like Dzidzantun, Tixkokob, Oxkutzcab and Totiz -- often the first time the communities have had daily news coverage. It's just more of the same, Menendez said: "Listening to what the little guy has to say." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D