MEXICO CITY — In a country where the brutal killings of journalists are almost routine, a recent spree of violent deaths has provoked a rare outpouring of public outrage among reporters and everyday citizens alike in Mexico.
Journalists in dozens of cities across the nation held vigils and demonstrations on Tuesday night, one of the largest mass protests over the murders of media workers in recent years after three of their colleagues were killed this month, two of them just days apart in the same city.
“It’s infuriating, it’s enraging, because journalists always give our soul, our heart, our body,” said Oscar Luna, who worked as a reporter for 10 years and attended a vigil in Mexico City. “From one moment to the next, they take away that passion, that commitment, that love, that dedication that you have toward journalism.”
The killings came in rapid succession.
Alfonso Margarito Martínez Esquivel, a photographer who had worked with local and foreign media outlets, was killed outside his home in broad daylight on Jan. 17 in the border city of Tijuana. Just days later, Lourdes Maldonado López, a veteran broadcast reporter who covered politics and corruption, was shot and killed inside her car, also in Tijuana.
“I’ve never felt this worry, not just for me, but a fear for others, for those people I’ve been working with for 20 years,” said Aline Corpus, a longtime Tijuana correspondent for one of Mexico’s national newspapers who attended a vigil in the city on Tuesday night. “You feel like an easy target.”
The two Tijuana killings followed the murder of the reporter José Luis Gamboa Arenas in the eastern port city of Veracruz on Jan. 10, according to the State Commission for the Attention to and Protection of Journalists. News reports said he was stabbed.
The string of killings has underscored the dangerous environment that media workers in the country face: According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, nine journalists were killed in Mexico last year, making it one of the deadliest countries in the world for reporters, alongside India and Afghanistan.
“The brutal killing of Lourdes Maldonado is horrifying,” Jan-Albert Hootsen, C.P.J.’s representative for Mexico, said in a statement. “The ongoing brutality against the journalists in this country is a direct consequence of the authorities’ unwillingness and inability to combat the festering impunity that fuels these killings.”
While the Latin American nation has experienced widespread violence in recent years, with more than 30,000 murders recorded last year alone, according to the Mexican government, journalists are regularly targeted with deadly precision, often in direct reprisal for their work. In many of those cases, the suspects include the authorities themselves.
The surge in attacks against media workers has left vast swaths of the country in an information blackout, said Leopoldo Maldonado, regional director of the media advocacy group Article 19. Mr. Maldonado has no relation to Ms. Maldonado López.
“What we call zones of silence are being imposed, they’re spreading, they’re propagating like a pandemic,” he said.
Despite the violence…
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