Ismael Bojórquez heard
Chapo Guzman’s son was dead in a Lamborghini.
When he reached the scene there was no body, and no Lamborghini. Those at the scene denied an event had
occurred, yet the investigative reporter looked around and saw fresh blood,
shards of broken glass and a bumper which had broken off. He
photographed what he saw, and visited the municipal police who denied
anything happened…ditto the police commander, he said he could not speak about it. The
state Attorney’s office was called, they said “Officially, nothing occurred,”
Bojórquez recalls. “Officially, he wasn’t even dead.”
So it goes in Mexico, where what is permitted to be
reported is determined by one cartel or the other. The reality is cartels do not like much narco
news printed. Period. Even without writing an opinion, strictly
reporting basic facts, they will say when, how or if it is reported.
Rio Doce a Culiacan newspaper, in the hometown of
Mexico’s most powerful cartel, that insists on writing about the drug violence.
There are other places, online and in print, where Mexican readers can go to
find body counts or pictures of blood-spattered crime scenes, but Riodoce prides
itself on its investigative work, on trying to ferret out the stories that
neither the cartels nor the government want told.
They are targeted.
Even on the web, where their former California Web company pulled the
Welcome mat after being hacked into.
An example how selective reporting is in Mexico, is something
that happened in my city in Mexico. Our comandante
was killed. He was a regional comandante in charge of
several cities, much like the sheriff of Los Angeles County being in charge of multiple cities. We suffered a week of great violence. A war between cartels. I heard the comandante was dead. Killed by narcos and left a few blocks from
my office with a narco message pinned to his chest with ice picks. I sourced the news and nothing. Not for 4 days. And when it finally appeared, it was not on the front page, it was
minimal reporting at best. We were lucky; often
there is no reporting that violence has occurred.
This sets Rio Doce apart from all others. Rio Doce reports the facts of Mexico’s Narco
violence, uncut, unedited from outside influences.
Mexico is now deemed by the International Press Institute as being the most dangerous nation to be a reporter in.
This is an extremely long article, but so worth the time
reading. It is filled with intriguing
stories and information. You will see
Borderland Beat is mentioned in the Bloomberg article. I will comment in respect to the mention; I
do worry about placing my staff in danger, I am constantly rethinking my actions
and words and wonder if I inadvertently compromised their safety.
We reporters are here for the same reason
Buggs created BB to begin with. We are strong in
the belief that change is brought by the informed. We hope in our small way we can provide information
to the English speaking world of what exists, hopefully that will transcend into creating
a life with greater security in the Mexico we love…. Paz, Chivis
Ismael
Bojórquez, Director, Riodoce “Up to this point, despite the risks, I believe that there are conditions under which we can do this work, and with the small hope that things will get better,” he says. “It’s really a hope in that hope, because the truth is I don’t see a way out for the country in the short term. But you have to bet on something."
Ismael Bojorquez Perea was born in Sinaloa, Mexico on
August 18, 1956.
He obtained a Social Communication degree
at the Autonomous University of Sinaloa.
He began his professional carreer as a TV
reporter in 1990, in Mazatlán, Sinaloa, and then, in 1992, he joined the Daily
Noroeste in Culiacán where he was part of the research team and beacame head of
information.
During that time, he worked as
correspondant for the national magazine Proceso.
In the fall of 2002, along
with a group of colleagues, he founded the weekly newspaper RIODOCE, which
firstly suffered the harassment of local governments, too sensitive to
criticism and now struggles to survive the neverending violence in Sinaloa, due
to the hostility of organised crime. He is currently Managing Editor of
RIODOCE, which has become national and international reference by receiving the
2011 Maria Cabot Prize awarded by the Columbia University. He believes that
journalism in Mexico is going through the worst time of its history, due to the
daily and deadly threats of the Narco. (WAN)
by Drake Bennett for Bloomberg Business Week
Early on Aug. 29, 2010, Ismael Bojórquez, editor of the
newsweekly Riodoce, in the Mexican city of Culiacán, learned that a man
in his 20s had been found dead of bullet wounds in a white Lamborghini. Murders
of young men are common in Culiacán, the capital of the state of Sinaloa and
the seat of power of the cartel of the same name, but this one was different.
The victim, Bojórquez heard, was the son of Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzmán, the head
of the Sinaloa cartel and the most powerful drug kingpin in Mexico. Two and a
half years earlier, when another of El Chapo’s sons was gunned down by the
rival Beltrán Leyva cartel, it ignited a bloody war—387 people were killed in
Culiacán in three months. In a way, El Chapo (Spanish for “Shorty”; Guzmán is
5’6”) and his empire are the main subjects of Riodoce, one of the only
periodicals in Mexico that seriously investigates drug violence.
Bojórquez, a compact man with a thin moustache and a
broad, angular face, immediately drove to the crime scene. It was on a street
called Presa Azúcar, in a residential part of town. To his surprise, there was
no body, and no car—only some blood on the asphalt, scattered shards of broken
glass, and pieces of a car bumper. He took a few pictures and went to a police
post about 200 meters down the street, but the officers there said they didn’t
know anything and referred him to the district police commander. When Bojórquez
called on him, the commander said he couldn’t talk about it. The state’s
attorney’s office, too, said nothing. “Officially, nothing occurred,” Bojórquez
recalls. “Officially, he wasn’t even dead.”
Riodoce’s staff started calling around; they have sources in law
enforcement, in the state and local government, and others who are linked in
various ways to the cartels. Bojórquez’s original source, it turned out, had
been wrong. The car was not a Lamborghini, it was a Ferrari. And the victim
wasn’t El Chapo’s son but a different narco scion, Marcial Fernández. His
father, Manuel, was an ally of El Chapo’s, and a brutal man known alternately
as “El Animal” and “La Puerca” (“the sow”).
Riodoce’s reporters also learned about a strange altercation
that had taken place at the crime scene: As the police and a few onlookers were
standing around Fernández’s bullet-riddled sports car waiting for the coroner to
arrive, several heavily armed men drove up. They leveled their weapons at the
police, took Fernández’s body, and drove off. When two news photographers
showed up, the police told them nothing had happened, then left. Later that
night, the armed strangers returned and towed the Ferrari away, leaving only
the broken glass and blood that Bojórquez found after sunrise.
None of this made the news at first. Fernández had been
killed at 2:30 a.m. on Sunday, but a day and then a week went by with no
coverage of the shooting. Like many of the killings in Culiacán, Fernández’s
death had been declared off limits. “The police kept quiet, the government kept
quiet, but the press kept quiet as well,” says Bojórquez. One of the
photographers who had been on the scene left town, fearing for his life.
According to Reporters Without Borders, 80 Mexican
journalists have been killed and 14 others have disappeared since 2000. In
Juárez, on the country’s northern border, the city’s biggest newspaper, El
Diario, has had both a police reporter and a photographer murdered in the
past three and a half years. The editor of El Mañana, in Nuevo Laredo,
was stabbed to death in 2004, and two years later assailants sprayed gunfire
and tossed a grenade into the newspaper’s offices, badly wounding a veteran
reporter. Riodoce had its own grenade attack in 2009, although no one
was hurt. Mexico last year beat out Iraq as the most dangerous country in the
world for journalists in the rankings of the International Press Institute, and
the first death of 2012 took place on Jan. 6, when a reporter from La Ultima
Palabra, in a suburb of Monterrey, was chased down in his car and shot to
death.
“Crimes against journalists occur with impunity at the
local level,” says Jorge Zepeda Patterson, the former editor of El Universal
in Mexico City. “We are losing our capacity to say what’s happening to our
country.”
The attacks are meant to cow Mexico’s media, and they
have succeeded: Today the vast majority of the nation’s newspapers, magazines,
and radio and TV stations do not cover the bloodshed. Especially at the local
level, news outlets will, at most, reprint official press releases about
arrests and killings. In the worst areas, the narcos even have press
handlers—unidentified voices on the other end of the phone warning a reporter
not to cover a shooting, or giving the order to write about the “message
killing” of a rival.
Against all this, Riodoce stands out—a small
paper, in the hometown of Mexico’s most powerful cartel, that insists on
writing about the drug violence. There are other places, online and in print,
where Mexican readers can go to find body counts or pictures of blood-spattered
crime scenes, but Riodoce prides itself on its investigative work, on
trying to ferret out the stories that neither the cartels nor the government
want told. As news outlets all over the country have censored themselves in the
face of lethal ultimatums, Riodoce’s reputation has grown. Today it’s
read far beyond Culiacán, by cartel analysts, government officials, fellow
journalists, and drug traffickers themselves. Last year one of the paper’s
columnists and co-founders, Javier Valdez, won the Committee to Protect
Journalists’ International Press Freedom Award, along with journalists from
Pakistan, Belarus, and Bahrain.
“The work that they do is amazing, they make us all
proud,” says Marco Santos, managing editor of Noroeste, one of Culiacán’s
two dailies. “They’re like a lighthouse.”
Nine days after Marcial Fernández’s killing, Riodoce
posted an article on its website titled “Fuerte Es el Silencio,” or “The
Silence Is Deafening”—an account of the killing and a condemnation of the
information blackout that had enveloped it. The next print edition, the
following Sunday, also carried the story. The article carried no byline.
Although it was written in breathless prose, a Riodoce trademark, it was
a carefully edited piece of work. The staff debated whether to identify the
victim—an important piece of information, but writing about the families of
leading narcos was one of the red lines that even Riodoce does not
cross. In the end they printed Fernández’s name, citing “unofficial sources,”
but gave no information about who he was: nothing about his father, nothing
about why he could afford a Ferrari or why someone might want to kill him. It
was, as Bojórquez describes it, a “sanitized version.”
Only months later did the full story come out: El Animal,
arrested for drug trafficking, told federal police that he had heard that the
killing had been a case of mistaken identity. El Chapo’s son, the intended
target, owned a white Lamborghini. El Animal’s son’s Ferrari was also white,
and a Beltrán Leyva hit squad, mistaking one car for the other, had ambushed
the younger Fernández on his way home from a late night out. Today, Martin
Gastelum, a spokesman for the state prosecutor’s office in Sinaloa, still has
nothing to say about the events or Riodoce’s account. “I cannot confirm
or deny anything,” he responds. No one has been arrested for the murder, but a
few weeks after it occurred the Beltrán Leyva boss rumored to have been
responsible was kidnapped by El Chapo’s men, and a video of his torture and
killing was posted to the Internet.
On a warm, clear Tuesday morning in February, Riodoce is holding its weekly editorial meeting in its office two floors above a dental practice. While the paper now employs 14 freelancers, its founders are still the only full-time editorial staff, and the meeting comprises the four of them and the accountant, Milagros García, a young woman in rhinestone-studded jeans. She stays only for the first few minutes, leaving after her report on the paper’s finances: In January the paper made $15,200 from newsstand sales and $21,100 selling ads.
On a warm, clear Tuesday morning in February, Riodoce is holding its weekly editorial meeting in its office two floors above a dental practice. While the paper now employs 14 freelancers, its founders are still the only full-time editorial staff, and the meeting comprises the four of them and the accountant, Milagros García, a young woman in rhinestone-studded jeans. She stays only for the first few minutes, leaving after her report on the paper’s finances: In January the paper made $15,200 from newsstand sales and $21,100 selling ads.
For a shoestring operation like Riodoce, that’s
plenty. The paper’s print run averages 5,000 copies. Each week Bojórquez makes
the call on how many copies to print: It tops out at 7,500 but can be as low as
1,500. The staff doesn’t track their online readership; as Bojórquez says,
that’s one of their failings as businessmen.
Next, Bojórquez brings up the question of whether to
switch to a new Web hosting company. Until recently, the paper’s website was
hosted by California-based DreamHost, but the company has requested that Riodoce
take its business elsewhere after hackers crashed the paper’s website in
November. Increasingly, Mexican journalists reporting on the drug wars have
sought protection in the cyber realm—the widely read blog Borderland Beat has
no physical offices to bomb and keeps the names of its contributors secret—but
the cartels find them anyway. In September, Los Zetas, a cartel renowned for
its ruthlessness, beheaded an editor of Primera Hora in Nuevo Laredo
because she had been blogging about drug crime under a pseudonym.
Cyberattacks are new territory for the cartels, however.
Asked who was behind the hacking, Bojórquez shrugs—it might have been the
cartels, or it might have been someone in law enforcement, angry about one of
the paper’s corruption investigations. It might have been the Mexican wing of
the hacker collective Anonymous, which had earlier called on news outlets to
stop reporting the details of cartel message killings: murders meant to
intimidate rivals or authorities that often involve notes left beside mutilated
bodies.
As the meeting moves into editorial matters, the four
discuss articles they have on the boil. Two of the writers, Alejandro Sicairos
and Javier Valdez, are working on stories on corrupt judges. Valdez says the
judge he is looking at has raised suspicions with her lavish lifestyle. Asked
by investigators how she could afford her large house, multiple cars, and
designer wardrobe, she said she bought them with casino winnings. Then Valdez
brings up a tricky situation he’s having with a source in the local police who
is offering to let him “borrow” a recently arrested cartel member and interview
him—Bojórquez is afraid the officer is essentially asking Valdez to interrogate
the man for the police. “We have to keep the relationship very clear,” the
editor says, as much to himself as to anyone else.
Full-bellied and mordant, with a bristling gray buzz cut,
Valdez is the paper’s star. In his weekly column, Malayerba (Bad Grass,
a play on the marijuana trade that is the origin of Sinaloa’s cartels), he
writes about the survivors of kidnappings, the relatives of the disappeared,
the casual cruelty of the cartels, and the way violence insinuates itself into
everyone’s lives in Sinaloa. A Dashiell Hammett devotee, he writes in a film
noir style, heavy on recreated dialogue and dramatic description. In one recent
column he tells the story of a young man who sees his cousin mistakenly killed
by a sicario, a cartel hit man—the cousin is riding in a car with the
intended target. (Reading Riodoce, one is struck not only by the
viciousness of the cartel’s killers but also by their incompetence.) The sicario
also happens to be the young man’s childhood best friend. In another column,
Valdez describes how a local teacher, caught up in Sinaloa’s culture of lethal
retribution, asks a narco he knows to torture a man for him after a heated
traffic argument.
For Valdez and his colleagues, the real subject is a
society deformed by the drug wars: The region’s tomato growers use trucking
companies run by the narcos, and commuters keep one eye out for expensive cars
and luxury SUVs that speed without license plates through the streets.
Politicians take money from the cartels, the military rounds up and brutally
interrogates young men, and prominent businessmen grow rich from laundering
drug profits. “I’m involved in drug trafficking,” says Valdez, “because I live
here.” As the news meeting winds down, it becomes clear what he means. Valdez
is organizing a local roundtable co-sponsored by the Committee to Protect
Journalists. He proposes renting out space for the event at Culiacán’s Hotel
Lucerna. Bojórquez, however, objects. He points out that an investor in the
hotel has been linked to the cartels, and it wouldn’t do to hold an event for Riodoce
in a narco-owned establishment.
The rules under which Riodoce works are foreign to
most journalists; the paper operates in a nebulous area between self-censorship
and freedom. In covering drug violence at all, its writers and editors are
taking a grave risk, but it is a risk they see as manageable. Over years of
covering the cartels, Bojórquez and his staff have developed a set of
guidelines that they believe afford at least some protection. Riodoce
doesn’t write about the families of narcos, nor does it write about the
legitimate businesses that the cartels run or contract with unless that
information is already public. And it does not publish details about the drug
trafficking infrastructure—the routes used to transport drugs or the locations
of safe houses, airstrips, or training camps. When police in Culiacán recently
stormed two houses that belonged to El Chapo’s ex-wife, it was the first time
her real estate holdings had appeared in the pages of Riodoce—even
though the paper’s reporters, like every journalist in town, had known about
them for years.
“We never write off a subject entirely,” Bojórquez says.
“We have never stopped a story because it’s too dangerous. We always say we’ll
write about this or that, but how are we going to do it? Up to what point are
we going to investigate it? What exactly are we going to publish? It’s always
in those terms. It’s a question of finding the line.”
Finding the line can be difficult. In 2010, El Diario
de Juárez published an editorial on its front page addressing the cartels
after the murder of Luis Carlos Santiago, a 21-year-old photography intern at
the paper. “You are at present the de facto authorities in this city,” the
editorial read. “What is it you want from us? What is it you want us to publish
or not publish? Explain so that we can respond.”
Riodoce has yet to issue such a direct appeal, relying instead
on its sources in Sinaloa’s criminal underworld to monitor how stories are
received there—corrupt police with cartel connections, businessmen who can make
a call or two. When its coverage is received poorly, Riodoce pulls back.
“You know what not to write in order to keep writing,” Valdez says. It’s an
inexact system, of course, and it has not totally protected the paper: The
grenade attack, which took place on Sept. 7, 2009, at around 2 a.m., remains
unsolved, like most violent crimes in Mexico. There are plenty of potential
suspects—the list of people the paper has angered is long.
Even Riodoce’s admirers can be skeptical about
some of what it prints. Alejandro Hope, a former director of international
affairs for CISEN, Mexico’s intelligence agency, sees the paper as an
invaluable source of information, but cautions that it “can be sort of
conspiratorial in worldview. For them everything can be explained by the
goings-on of Chapo Guzmán, whether he’s fighting or making peace with someone.”
And it is difficult to confirm Riodoce’s accounts. The paper grants
anonymity to most of its sources to protect them and get them to talk, and
cartels do not sit for interviews with the press. The office of Sinaloa’s
governor, Mario López Valdez—whom Riodoce has charged with being in the
pocket of the Sinaloa cartel—did not return repeated phone calls asking for
comment.
Asked about the accuracy of his reporting, Valdez
suggested we speak with one of his sources. One afternoon, in the rear of a
dark cafe off of a plaza in downtown Culiacán, Valdez introduced us to a
graduate student in his mid-20s, the basis for the Malayerba column
about the young man whose childhood friend kills his cousin. As in most of his
columns, Valdez changed or obscured certain details—the exact relationship
between the student and the murdered relative, the cartel that controlled the
town where the hit occurred. But the student confirmed the story in all
important respects.
“With Riodoce, you see the truth,” Valdez’s source
said. “Other papers wrote that two malandras [scoundrels] had died, but Riodoce
showed that one of them wasn’t a bad person.”
Sinaloa’s drug economy dates to the late 19th century, when Chinese workers brought over to build Mexico’s railroads planted poppies for opium. The state sits on the western edge of the country, about two days’ drive from the U.S. border, between the mountains of the Sierra Madre Occidental and the Gulf of California. Its fertile coastal plain is Mexico’s breadbasket—huge farms there grow tomatoes, squash, sugarcane, rice, and wheat—and its mountains are ideal for the industrial cultivation of marijuana and poppies. Sinaloa met the explosion in American demand for marijuana in the 1960s, followed by heroin in the 1970s.
Sinaloa’s drug economy dates to the late 19th century, when Chinese workers brought over to build Mexico’s railroads planted poppies for opium. The state sits on the western edge of the country, about two days’ drive from the U.S. border, between the mountains of the Sierra Madre Occidental and the Gulf of California. Its fertile coastal plain is Mexico’s breadbasket—huge farms there grow tomatoes, squash, sugarcane, rice, and wheat—and its mountains are ideal for the industrial cultivation of marijuana and poppies. Sinaloa met the explosion in American demand for marijuana in the 1960s, followed by heroin in the 1970s.
By then, Culiacán, a city of a few hundred thousand, was
averaging two to three drug-related murders a day—local papers had taken to
comparing it to Al Capone’s Chicago, “with gangsters in sandals.” Journalists
were targets. In February 1978, a crusading investigative reporter named Roberto
Martínez Montenegro was shot in the head as he sat in his car, the third
journalist killed in five months. Martínez was at his death already an anomaly;
most of his colleagues were far less willing to cause trouble. Many were on
cartel or government payrolls, others were simply rattled by the threat of
violent reprisal. There were subtler forms of control, too. Then as now, the
government provides much of the advertising revenue for most Mexican
newspapers—the pages are full of ads for state agencies and political parties.
And then as now, Mexican journalists complain that government officials are
quick to pull ads in response to stories they don’t like.
Nonetheless, investigative journalism did survive in
Culiacán, especially at Martínez’s old paper, Noroeste. Bojórquez began
working there in 1992, eventually rising to become the managing editor in
charge of the entire reporting staff. Valdez, a member of Bojórquez’s
investigative team, wrote a column called Con Sabor a Asfalto, or,
loosely, Tales from the Street. Sicairos was the paper’s political columnist,
known for colorful barbs and deep reporting. The three were popular with
readers, legends in the newsroom, and feared and disliked by many in Sinaloa’s
political class.
In 2002, the paper decided that the investigative work
the three specialized in was too expensive, and sharply cut back on it.
Bojórquez left on Sept. 6, 2002; Valdez and Sicairos, the following day. Joined
by Cayetano Osuna, an old school friend of Bojórquez’s who had also briefly worked
at Noroeste, they put together a plan for a competing newspaper that
would publish the sort of stories that their former employer would not.
None of them had run a business, and while their vision
was a weekly with a small staff, even that would cost more than they could put
together on their own. Bojórquez suggested selling shares to the public. La
Jornada in Mexico City had done something similar when it was founded in
1984; so had El Sur de Acapulco. The four journalists drew up the
paperwork to sell 2,000 shares at 1,000 pesos apiece. They went to their
friends and relatives, to businessmen who weren’t linked to the cartels, to
university professors. And despite their ambition for an independent newspaper,
they went to political parties as well—the National Action Party (PAN), at the
time Sinaloa’s opposition party, was happy to put in money. Still, by the time
the founders had exhausted their list of potential buyers, they had sold only
150 shares. Some friends balked when it came time to actually pay. Other
potential donors said they had been told by the then-governor not to support
the new paper.
With less than a tenth of the capital they had planned
on, the four decided to go ahead. “We had confidence in ourselves,” Bojórquez
recalls. “We also didn’t have much choice. We had to make a living.” Riodoce’s
first edition came out Feb. 3, 2003, with a cover story about the political
exile of Francisco Labastida, once the state’s most powerful politician, whose
loss to Vicente Fox in the 2000 presidential election ended 71 years of
unbroken rule by the PRI, the Institutional Revolutionary Party.
Riodoce’s name is a reference to Culiacán’s 11 rivers: The paper
would be the twelfth, a torrent of information and analysis. For its first two
years, however, Riodoce was constantly in danger of drying up. There
wasn’t money to hire anyone, so the founders wrote everything and went without
salaries for months. Gradually, the paper built a readership with its exposés
of the links between government and organized crime—one early cover story
explored the underworld connections of a former mayor of Culiacán, Jorge Chávez
Castro, who had been murdered in his home. Another focused on a corrupt local
police chief and the several mansions he had accumulated despite a meager
public servant’s salary. People started buying Riodoce at street corner
newsstands, convenience stores, and tortilla shops. The paper sold steadily in
the state capitol building.
“We just wanted to do good journalism. But to everyone
else, it was new, it was audacious, and it was frightening,” Valdez says. The
paper published investigation after investigation despite the fact that 80
percent of its ads came from government institutions and their employees—state
and local government, the local public university, public sector unions. Early
on, Riodoce’s willingness to take on its biggest advertisers was largely
a matter of the founders’ willingness not to pay themselves. In recent years,
though, it has been helped by the fact that an unusually large proportion of
the paper’s revenue comes not from advertising but from newsstand sales. That
provides a cushion against the inevitable dips in ad money that follows exposés
of official corruption.
There is a fierce debate in Mexico over what is to blame
for the explosion in killings since 2006—how much is due to President Felipe
Calderón’s decision to deploy the military against the cartels, how much is cartel
turf warfare, and how much the two feed off each other. “Before, the drug trade
was done through organized corruption. You had direction from the top down; you
had money from the bottom up,” says Edgardo Buscaglia, an expert at Columbia
University on Mexican organized crime. “Suddenly that gets replaced with
organized violence.”
Whatever the causes, the bloody turn in Mexico’s drug
wars became Riodoce’s main story. As the violence climbed, the paper’s
competitors wrote less about it, and the new weekly became a lone voice. And
more cartel stories brought more readers. For Riodoce, reporting on the
narcos was a crusade, but it also became a business strategy. Each week’s
edition goes on newsstands on Sunday. “Whether we sell out by Monday all
depends on the front page,” Bojórquez says. “It’s drug trafficking that sells.”
Alejandro Hope, the former intelligence analyst, says he
goes to Riodoce’s website every day, along with that of El Diario de
Juárez—despite the killing of two of its staffers, it also continues to
investigate the cartels. “They’re publishing information you can’t find
anywhere else,” he says.
No one in Culiacán believes things are going to change
for the better anytime soon. For the time being, Riodoce will keep
trying to find the line between what it wants to write and what it can. Among
the grandiose things journalists say about themselves is that their job is to
comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable—the line is from the American
satirist Finley Peter Dunne. Mexican journalists, even at a paper like Riodoce,
cannot do that. They can perhaps annoy the cartels, but they cannot afflict
them. The cartels have cornered the market in affliction.
Bojórquez, as much as anyone else, is aware of the limits
of what he does. “Up to this point, despite the risks, I believe that there are
conditions under which we can do this work, and with the small hope that things
will get better,” he says. “It’s really a hope in that hope, because the truth
is I don’t see a way out for the country in the short term. But you have to bet
on something."
Read more on the incident with Rio and the California Web Host company HERE
(Espanol)
Read more on the incident with Rio and the California Web Host company HERE
(Espanol)
Society takes for granted that the news will be there....imagine being a journalist in Mexico!! You might have second thoughts choosing that as your major..and chivis you are always giving credit to other reporters without mentioning yourself. Your right up there with them. Thanks
ReplyDeleteChivis,
ReplyDeleteYou speak of the commandante in your town being killed. Is this in Acuña and when did this occur?
The one in the lambo it was the son of el animal(la puerca)
ReplyDeleteLook up la muerte de marcial Fernandez
I thank you borderland beat for your stories and use them as a tool to inform as many people as i can about the sense of hopelessness for honest people, not only in Mexico, but many of the countrys in the Americas that the narco war has caused. I have seen comments posted on various sites like this such as this one saying that the readers are " trying to get their next fix for grisly pictures". That is not always the case, because for many of us living in fear not only for loved ones, but the innocent people afflicted by the senseless genocide within your countries, courageous reporters exposing the truth maybe the last hope. Bless all that fight evil for you are not alone with the dream of a better future.
ReplyDeletethis was a very good article pictureing a glimmer of reporting at its best. They do quite a good job at making sure that theyreport what they can, at a more minimal risk. Too bad there is not an english version of it for us gringos
ReplyDeleteMaybe that so called drug expert should go and read there.
ReplyDeleteAh that's true she does not speak spanish
Reporters want to perpetrate a victim image down in Mexico!!
ReplyDeleteI know there are some innocent reporters; now I don’t just know but I seen with my own eyes, reporters, narcos (drug dealers), politics and all kind of criminals have strong ties to each other. Reporters CHARGE any of the above for not publishing information and when they try to charge too much is when Sh*t is stir up, yeah that it’s the mf truth. Some reporters are victims; not all of them, they are as dirty as corrupted politics, police officers, drug dealers, criminals in general. Feel sorry for the ones that are doing their job but not all of them, just like cops in Mexico.
This is true. Not all of them but they charge money to you if you want or not want to be on the news. Many years ago I worked at a bar in Mexico. Some costumers got into a fight. Somebody got stabed. Then the paramedics and cops showed up and Tv Azteca news too. The reporter told the owner of the place that this will give the place bad reputation. So if he do not want to be on the news he needed to pay the reporter. The owner said go to hell and we were on the news.
DeleteI would like to first commend Chivis and the rest of the journalist for continuing to provide invaluable information to the public. Although Chivis and his colleagues try to report accurate facts, reading this article conveys the great deal of censorship that occurs in Mexico. It is evident that the “facts” must still be accommodated to the liking of local cartels which corroborates the power of these organizations. When a human being must be weary of his or her thoughts before expressing them is evidence of the complete terror and psychological power these organizations have over the citizens of Mexico. This predicament is truly lamentable…. EL NEUTRON
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ReplyDeleteyes, I know it was marcial, you did not read the article or you would see they say that and when Puerca was arrested he said it was mistaken ID that his son was killed because the gunmen thought it was Chapos' son...and Cgapo's son is the real target.
not Acuna
This occurred almost five years ago.
out of Curiosity I check with my source in Salillo how many comandantes had been killed...just in Coahuila, and was surprised to learn "over 12" in 5 years.
Surprising to me because I only read about 4, but isn't that what the article is about? Selective reporting?
I wonder how many have been killed in all of Mexico, there is no way for me to gather that info but I do know someone who is a reporter who may know and I will check with him today.
Paz, Chivis
De esa muerta ay otro rumor que no fue confusion que el gaucho lo buscaba por que era amigo de la esposa o novia del gaucho
DeleteMarcial Fernandez son of the animal.
ReplyDeleteIsrael Rincón/El Guacho,payed the price for killing him.Rincon must have had a death wish,how did he think he would get away with killing him?
It was only a matter of time before he got picked up.
To borrow a metaphor that was applied during WWII when Germany invaded the Soviet Union in 1941:
ReplyDeleteCartels are like an elephant which is trying to kill a nest of ants. The elephant may kill hundreds of them maybe even thousands of them, but in the end the ants will devour the elephant.
When Vicente Fox removed criminal liability for what is published in 2005, he unleashed a free press that is, in my view, boisterous and fearless in most cases. The cartels can't unring that bell, and in the end a free press will win, and the cartels will lose.
Excellent report. The situation exists throughout Mexico, but especially in the north. One feels gratitude and sorrow when one reads about these courageous reporters, and one feels sorrow and anger when remembering the Mexico that was. Try as I might, I cannot see it getting any better. There are simply too many special interests that benefit directly and indirectly from drug trafficking, and the political system is designed to insure that politicians are not held accountable.
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ReplyDeleteYou guys should make contact with Alex Jones and do a podcast interview so that your presence and message is heard THROUGHOUT THE WORLD. This would be beneficial in many ways and would increase traffic on your web site
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First it was a Lamborgini, then it was a Ferrari.... He was the son of a Mexican drug lord. Whatever it was, I'm sure it was stolen.
ReplyDeleteThey make millions and million fuckin genius
Delete@10:58
ReplyDeleteThank you for the kind words, thinking of appreciative people like yourself keeps me going at times when I feel defeated and tired.
@Badanov...I always think of WWII and the underground papers and how alike the libre networks are.
But I can hardly disagree greater at your comment that the Mexican press is fearless. That simply is not true. They are dictated by cartels of what or if to report and how much. I know this so well. That does not make them bad people, it makes them scared shitless people. Even if they should move around as to not be discovered it is their extended families that will suffer. WHat is the fix? IMO more blogs and greater number of publications such as ZETA and Rio Doce. That aside, it will self correct once there are more computer access and public computer centers. Usually found in libraries, but Mx has so few libraries. With a computer access truth can not be denied. Unless you are a nation such as China.
In China so much is banned, even stuff like Pandora...it drives us nuts.
To everyone...thank you very much for taking the time to read this article. I always wonder how well an article such as this will be received, this was received VERY well. WHat exists in Mx is more than the aftermath of violence, the elements at the root of the issue is an important. Reporters of Rio Doce and ZETA are true heroes...paz, chivis
Thanks Chapo, Mexico is officially a failed state.
ReplyDeleteJust read that a Proceso reporter was killed today.
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