‘An accumulation of lies’: Right-wing group La Resistencia stokes anti-press fervor in Peru

A screenshot from video footage of La Resistencia protesters lighting flares outside the office of IDL-Reporteros on May 5, 2023, during the group's largest protest to date. (YouTube/La República)

In Peru, ultra right-wing group La Resistencia has picketed the homes and offices of prominent journalists, politicians, and human rights activists, disrupted book events and news conferences, and hurled death threats and antisemitic slurs against one of the country’s most prominent investigative journalism outlets, IDL-Reporteros, and its chief editor Gustavo Gorriti.

In a new feature, Goritti tells CPJ how La Resistencia’s actions are reducing the impact of IDL-Reporteros’ investigative journalism and undermining press freedom in a country where journalists are increasingly facing defamation lawsuits and violence.

Global press freedom updates

Spotlight

This week, CPJ called on Congress to push for justice during Israeli President Isaac Herzog’s visit to the U.S., and to leverage the U.S. partnership with Israel to:

On July 17, CPJ and more than 60 national organizations sent a letter to members of Congress urging them to support the Justice for Shireen Act, which would require the FBI and the State Department to publicly report on the circumstances surrounding Shireen Abu Akleh’s death.

🔎Dive deeper: Robert Mahoney, a former CPJ executive director, wrote in Just Security this month about how the United States can leverage its unique relationship with Israel to push for change and achieve justice for Shireen Abu Akleh.


Special Event: Journalists Ana Arana and Oz Woloshyn will discuss their podcast “Silenced: The Radio Murders” about three radio journalists murdered in Miami’s Little Haiti after taking to the airwaves to inspire, organize, and participate in Haiti’s democratization. This podcast, from iHeartRadio and Kaleidoscope, revisits Arana’s 1994 investigation published by CPJ.

RSVP for the event, which will take place on Thursday, July 27, at 5:30 p.m., at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. Attendees will hear select clips from the podcast and in-depth context from panelists.

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A closer look

After an eight-year legal saga involving prominent investigative journalist Jovo Martinović, who was twice wrongly convicted on drug-related charges, on July 12 the Montenegro Supreme Court upheld a January verdict to acquit him.

Martinović denied the charges and said they were in retaliation for his journalism, a stance he maintained through an extended pre-trial detention, two retrials, and multiple appeals.

“The verdict is a critical vindication for Martinović, and we can only hope Montenegro authorities have learned that covering crime does not mean a reporter is involved in criminal activity,” said CPJ’s Europe representative Attila Mong.

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