New York, June 11, 2003—An Argentine photographer was brutally attacked
by police forces on Monday, June 9, while covering an incident outside
an industrial plant in the city of Buenos Aires.
At around 5:30 p.m. on Monday, agents of the Federal Police physically
assaulted Alejandro Goldín, 18, a photographer for Indymedia Argentina,
an international alternative media outlet, said sources familiar with
the situation. The incident occurred while officers confronted a group
of protesters of Brukman, a textile factory. According to local press
reports, Goldín was covering the confrontation between police and the
factory workers, who continue to keep the plant operating after the owners
abandoned it when the company went bankrupt.
Although Goldín identified himself as press and showed his credentials,
the police deliberately tried to smash his equipment. Goldín was beaten
on the head with a shotgun and shoved to the ground where various officers
kicked him repeatedly.
Goldín was taken to Ramos Mejía hospital where he received three stitches
to the head, and treatment for a swollen leg. The photographer was released
a few hours later. Indymedia Argentina filed a judicial complaint on June
10, and authorities are investigating the incident.
More police violence
This is the second attack by Federal Police at the textile factory.
Two months ago, on April 21, officers attacked and detained a group of
journalists who were interviewing and photographing protestors outside
the plant and workers who were being forced by the police to leave the
factory.
According to local sources, officers shot rubber bullets at Martín Ciccioli
and Alfredo Guirlanda, anchor and cameraman, respectively, from the Buenos
Aires América television show "Informe Central." The police detained Edgardo
Esteban, a correspondent for Telemundo network, and Miguel Bonasso, a
journalist and writer who works for the Buenos Aires-based daily Página
12. Esteban avoided arrest when his colleagues intervened on his behalf.
Bonasso was detained for two hours and released.
"These incidents, in which federal security forces were directly involved
in aggressive behavior toward the press, must be thoroughly investigated
and the perpetrators must be brought to justice, " said CPJ executive
director Ann Cooper. "We call on Argentina's recently elected government
to ensure that journalists are able to do their jobs without fear of reprisal."

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