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Blog del narco nuevo laredo 2016
Blog del narco nuevo laredo 2016







blog del narco nuevo laredo 2016

Steer clear of that area," read a warning tweeted by a writer in the northern city of Monterrey, the country's industrial heart now beset by drug violence. "They are killing like crazy! There's a shootout in the Lazaro Cardenas neighborhood.

blog del narco nuevo laredo 2016

It has become virtually impossible to work as a journalist but the federal authorities continue to delay implementation of an agreement for protecting journalists that was signed a year ago.With traditional media often intimidated by drug cartels, social media has given Mexicans a way to stay appraised about the dangers lurking in their towns and cities. Pineda draws cartoons for the magazines El Chamucho and Zócalo, the newspaper Milenio and the “ ¡Basta de Sangre!” - “No + sangre” campaign.Īn estimated 50,000 people have been killed in the federal offensive against drug trafficking that was launched in December 2006. Around 15 other journalists have fled to other states or fled the country in the past two months. Rafael Pineda, a well-known cartoonist known as Rapé, meanwhile reported on Twitter on 22 September that he was leaving Veracruz state for safety reasons. The state government was unable to explain this abuse of authority.

blog del narco nuevo laredo 2016

Three journalists – Jorge Flores of W Radio, Juan Carlos Alarcón of MVS Noticias and Arturo Moreno of the news agency Notimex – were detained at gunpoint by members of the Veracruz Investigative Agency (AVI) outside the Boca del Río forensic department’s headquarters and were forced to delete the photos they had taken. The discovery of bodies often leads to threats against the journalists covering the story. His family says that, on day he disappeared, he went out to conduct interviews for a story he was doing for his main newspaper.Ī new epicentre of terror since the start of 2011, Veracruz has just had another week of violence and intimidation of journalists. Manuel Gabriel Fonseca Hernández, a journalist who covers crime for El Mañanero de Acayucan, a newspaper in the south of Veracruz state, and who also writes for El Diario de Acayucan, Tribuna del Sur and La Verdad, has meanwhile been missing since 19 September. Two bodies bearing the marks of torture were hung from a bridge in Nuevo Laredo on 13 September with messages to the contributors to the “Al rojo vivo” and “Blog del Narco” websites. This type of warning was already used against social networks users who dare to talk about drug trafficking. “Ok Nuevo Laredo live on the social networks, I am La Nena de Laredo and I am here because of my reports and yours … for those who don’t want to believe it, this has happened to me because of my actions, because I trusted SEDENA and MARINA… Thank you for your attention. The international community must insist that the Mexican authorities give a regular accounting of the fight against impunity and the US federal government must impost drastic arms controls, without which the tragedy in Mexico will inevitably continue.”Īccording to various sources, Macías used online social networks to report about organized crime activities in her region and blogged under the pseudonym of “La Nena de Nuevo Laredo.” The Tamaulipas state attorney-general’s office said two computer keys, a music player, several cables and the following message were found near her body: “This collapse of a nation will not be resolved by the next elections. What will be left of freedom of information while the barbarity continues? The country is immersed in an all-out war and just writing the word ‘narcos’ or ‘trafficking’ can cost you your life. “There seems to be no way out of this horror. “The grim landmark of 80 journalists killed in the past decade has just been reached, with the murders getting steadily more horrific as the years pass,” Reporters Without Borders said. The previous three women victims were former Televisa reporter Rocio González Trápaga and Ana María Marcela Yarce Viveros, the editor of the weekly magazine Contralínea, who were killed together in the capital on 31 August, and columnist Yolanda Ordaz de la Cruz of the regional daily Notiver, who was slain in the eastern state of Veracruz on 26 July. Aged 39, she was the fourth woman journalist to be murdered in Mexico since the start of the year. The decapitated body of María Elizabeth Macías, the editor of Primera Hora, a daily based in Nuevo Laredo (in the eastern state of Tamaulipas), was found on 24 September.









Blog del narco nuevo laredo 2016