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Environmental Activists “Being Killed at Rate of 1 a Week” -By Jonathan Watts| Mother Jones

Dilma Rousseff’s land-use law is protested in front of Planalto Palace. The poster reads: ‘Forestry Code – Veto, Dilma’ (Photo: Ueslei Marcelino/Reuters).

The struggle for the world’s remaining natural resources is becoming more murderous, according to a new report that reveals that environmental activists were killed at the rate of one a week in 2011.

The death toll of advocates, community leaders, and journalists involved in the protection of forests, rivers, and land has risen dramatically in the past three years, said Global Witness.

Brazil—the host of the Rio+20 conference on sustainable development—has the worst record for danger in a decade that has seen the deaths of more than 365 defenders, said the briefing, which was released on the eve of the high-level segment of the Earth Summit.

The group called on the leaders at Rio to set up systems to monitor and counter the rising violence, which in many cases involves governments and foreign corporations, and to reduce the consumption pressures that are driving development into remote areas.

“This trend points to the increasingly fierce global battle for resources, and represents the sharpest of wake-up calls for delegates in Rio,” said Billy Kyte, a campaigner at Global Witness.

The group acknowledges that its results are incomplete and skewed toward certain countries because information is fragmented and often missing. This means the toll is likely to be higher than their findings, which did not include deaths related to cross-border conflicts prompted by competition for natural resources, and fighting over gas and oil.

Brazil recorded almost half of the killings worldwide, the majority of which were connected to illegal forest clearance by loggers and farmers in the Amazon and other remote areas, often described as the “Wild West.”

Among the recent high-profile cases were the murders last year of two high-profile Amazon activists, José Cláudio Ribeiro da Silva and Maria do Espirito Santo. Such are the risks that dozens of other activists and informers are now under state protection.

Unlike most countries on the list, however, the number of killings in Brazil declined slightly last year, perhaps because the government is making a greater effort to intervene in deforestation cases.

The reverse trend is apparent in the Philippines, where four activists were killed last month, prompting the Kalikasan People’s Network for Environment to talk of “bloody May.”

Though Brazil, Peru, and Colombia have reported high rates of killing in the past 10 years, this is partly because they are relatively transparent about the problem thanks to strong civil-society groups, media organizations, and church groups—notably the Catholic Land Commission in Brazil—which can monitor such crimes. Underreporting is thought likely in China and Central Asia, which have more closed systems, said the report. The full picture has still to emerge.

Last December, the UN special rapporteur on human rights noted: “Defenders working on land and environmental issues in connection with extractive industries and construction and development projects in the Americas…face the highest risk of death as result of their human rights activities.”

Reprint:  Environmental Activists “Being Killed at Rate of 1 a Week” -By Jonathan Watts| Mother Jones

 

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Mexican Crime Journalist Regina Martinez Found Dead in Xalapa, Veracruz -By Ken Ellingwood | L.A. Times

Regina Martinez, a crime reporter who covered drug trafficking and narco-related crimes for investigative Mexican news magazine Proceso, was found dead in Veracruz state on Saturday. Her body was found in the bathroom of her home in Xalapa, the capital.

State officials in Veracruz said police went to the house after receiving a telephone call. Martinez’s body showed signs of blows to the face and body and she appeared to have died of strangulation, the state prosecutor’s office said in a statement.

Mexico’s drug war has made it a dangerous place to work as a journalist, especially for those who cover the drug trade and organized crime. More than 40 Mexican journalists have been killed or have disappeared since President Felipe Calderon took office in 2006, according to the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists, which has pressed for greater protections for journalists in Mexico.

Martinez was a veteran reporter, according to Mexican media reports. Her recent work was dominated by crime stories. On Friday,  an online story carrying her byline described the arrests of nine municipal police officers suspected of drug ties. A day before that, she wrote about a shootout and the arrest of a woman suspected of commanding hit men. Earlier articles described proceedings against a mayor arrested on suspicion of links to drug traffickers.

Mexican journalists in volatile drug-trafficking areas, such as Veracruz, face high risks because they live in those communities and are often easily tracked down by crime gangs. Mexican lawmakers recently passed a constitutional reform that would beef up protection of journalists by making attacks against them a federal crime. The measure requires approval by more than half of Mexico’s 32 states.

Reprinted: Reporter for a Mexican Magazine Killed -By Ken Ellingwood | L.A. Times

Related: Mexican Reporter Killed in Another Case Unlikely to be Solved -By Daniel Hernandez| L.A. Times

Committee to Protect Journalist (Website)

 
 

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Record Number of Journalists Jailed, Killed in 2009

UNITED NATIONS, NY — An international press freedom watchdog said that 2009 saw a record number of journalists jailed or killed, including the single worst massacre in the Philippines, as well as an increase in journalists jailed, fueled by the crackdown in Iran.


The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists said the massacre of 29 journalists and two media support workers in a politically motivated ambush in the southern Philippines on Nov. 23 claimed more lives than any single event since it started documenting attacks on the press 18 years ago.

In its annual report on freedom of the press released Tuesday, the committee also accused Iran of being one of the leading jailers of journalists last year, with more than 90 reporters arrested and at least 23 writers and editors still being held. That’s second only to China, where 24 journalists are in jail today, it said, though that’s a decline from a high of 42 in 2004.

Maziar Bahari, a writer for Newsweek, spent 118 days in an Iranian prison after the disputed presidential election last year. Photo: Fred Chartrand/Associated Press

“The tragedies of 2009 only make our challenge more clear,” the committee’s executive director Joel Simon said in the report’s introduction. “Creating vibrant and secure global media requires new strategic thinking to bring killers to justice, to reduce the number of journalists in jail, and to support reporters working in exile or in repressive environments.”

He said there has been progress, and strongly endorsed the “naming and shaming” of violators which has generated public attention and mobilized action to protect journalists.

The report names 70 journalists killed because of their reporting – including 32 in the Philippines, nine in Somalia, four in Iraq, four in Pakistan and three in Russia. It said 24 other journalists were killed but the motive couldn’t be confirmed, including six in Mexico and three in Pakistan.

Consistent with an overall drop in violence, the number of Iraqi media deaths fell sharply to just four from 32 in 2007 and 11 in 2008, but the committee complained of increasing government harassment and assaults on the media, even in the relatively secure Kurdish region.

Newsweek International’s Editor Fareed Zakaria said in the preface that the closure of many foreign bureaus and reliance on freelancers abroad means that these stringers are taking on added risks.

Sources: Huffington Post, Google AP News

 

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