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URUGUAY IS HOME TO ONE OF THE MOST VIBRANT
MEDIA SCENES in the Americas, but public officials frequently pursue criminal
defamation cases against journalists, while state advertising is distributed
to reward media that provide favorable coverage of the government.
Uruguayan journalists say that criminal defamation cases have become commonplace
in the last decade. Under Article 26 of Law 16,099, the Uruguayan Press
Law, "crimes of defamation and slander committed through the media shall
be punished with prison terms within the limits provided for each crime
in the Criminal Code." Committing the offense through the media is termed
an "aggravating circumstance" under this article.
On October 9, a judge dismissed a lawsuit brought by the Armed Forces' Officers
Credit Union (Caofa) against Federico Fasano Mertens, director of the Montevideo
daily La República. The suit was based on an October 6, 1999
La República report that Caofa's former board of directors
were responsible for millions of dollars in financial losses for the credit
union. Two weeks later, Caofa's current board filed suit against the paper,
contending that the allegations damaged the institution and were untruthful.
The October ruling in favor of La República came after a local
prosecutor found that the information published by the paper was credible
and was not aimed at defaming Caofa.
Ironically, Fasano later filed defamation and slander charges against Claudio
Paolillo, editor of the rival Montevideo weekly Búsqueda,
who had mentioned "blackmail, criminal association, and swindle" in an opinion
piece about La República's director. Fasano withdrew the charges
on October 24, but the case illustrates how journalists can be tempted to
use existing press laws against each other. Uruguayan journalists have not
reached consensus on the issue of redefining defamation as a matter for
civil courts. CPJ's position is that defamation, particularly in the case
of public officials or public figures, should not be a criminal offense.
The Uruguayan Senate is currently discussing a right-to-information bill
drafted in 1996 and introduced in the Uruguayan Congress in 1998. Intended
to complement the press law, which does not guarantee access to public and
government information, the bill would guarantee the right to access public
records kept in government archives and would give preferential treatment
to media requests for access to such information.
Inexpensive foreign publications (notably from Argentina), high distribution
costs, and an advertising migration to television and the Internet have
rendered the print media susceptible to pressures from the state, which
is the largest advertiser in Uruguay. Journalists have objected to the government's
granting the directors of state agencies and enterprises discretion in their
use of advertising funds. They have also called for transparency in the
distribution of state advertising, and have proposed the creation of an
online database with detailed information on state advertising spending
for the last three years.
Reportedly, some publications depend almost entirely on state advertising,
which only heightens their vulnerability to government influence. In August,
the Montevideo weekly Guambia was forced to close shop for what its
director, Antonio Dabezies, called "lack of advertising support." Some journalists
have also reported bribery by public officials to influence coverage.
In an isolated incident, Julio César Da Rosa, owner and editor of
the independent station Radio del Centro, in the northern department of
Artigas, was murdered by a former local official, Carmelo Nery Colombo,
who shot the journalist and then turned the weapon on himself after Da Rosa
suggested that Colombo was unfit to run for public office.
FEBRUARY 24
Julio César Da Rosa, Radio del Centro
KILLED
Da Rosa, owner and editor of the independent station Radio del Centro, was murdered by former local official Carmelo Nery Colombo, who shot the journalist and then turned the weapon on himself.
Radio del Centro broadcasts from Baltasar Brum, an isolated village in the northern department of Artigas. Colombo served as secretary of the Baltasar Brum administrative board in 1998-1999, and was running for reelection at the time of the murder.
Da Rosa's widow, Euda Fernández Machado, told CPJ that Colombo was angered by Da Rosa's suggestion, in a February 23 broadcast, that he was unfit to run for public office. A supermarket owner with heavy
debts, Colombo was being investigated for excessive spending during his previous stint as secretary of the administrative board.
Immediately after the February 23 broadcast, Colombo called Da Rosa and demanded airtime to defend himself, Fernández said. Da Rosa invited him to the studio for a radio appearance at noon on February 24. No one else was present when Colombo arrived. Colombo shot Da Rosa in the heart, and then shot himself in the right temple. Da Rosa's face was bruised, Fernández said, indicating a scuffle might have taken place before the shooting.
On March 8, CPJ published a news alert about Da Rosa's murder.
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