The Many Dangers of Being a Journalist in Brazil

Nova Democracia newspaper In Brazil, the army’s effort to “pacify” and secure Rio’s favelas and crack down on their drug traffickers in preparation for the 2014 Soccer World Cup and 2016 Olympic Games are raising concern about the accompanying violations of human rights and civil liberties in these communities, including the rights of their own journalists. And the France-based group Reporters Without Border is concerned about this.

News reporting by the residents of these poor neighborhoods should enjoy the same safety guarantees and freedom from censorship as reporting by Brazil’s mainstream media, they say.

A series of incidents this month in Complexo do Alemão, a conglomeration of 13 favelas in Rio de Janeiro, has set a disturbing precedent and highlighted a reluctance on the part of the military to accept grass-roots reporting.

They began on October 2 when favela reporter Patrick Granja filmed a video showing a resident being beaten up by eight soldiers ( http://www.youtube.com/user/patrickgranja#p/u/5/WzxZ-HP9_LA ). It circulated online and was posted on the websites of the newspaper A Nova Democracia (AND) ( http://www.anovademocracia.com.br/ ) and the Favela news agency, Agência da Notícias das Favelas (ANF) ( http://www.anf.org.br/ ).
 
The next day, reporters from AND and ANF were censored in the same favela by soldiers ( http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iZ-nzMzS_A4 ), who ordered them to stop filming. After being told they needed an army permit to film, the reporters were themselves filmed by the soldiers.

“Despite the army command’s subsequent apology and attempt to portray the incident as a ‘misinterpreted order,’ there are grounds for asking whether certain zones or neighborhoods in Brazil are subject to a state of emergency in which the normal right to report news and information is suspended,” Reporters Without Borders said.
 
“We share the concern expressed by ANF. According to Complexo do Alemão’s inhabitants, restrictions were also imposed on an SBT TV crew. The fight against organized crime is necessary, but it should not lead to the creation of enclaves in which there is less respect for certain basic civil liberties than elsewhere. The Defense ministry must be quite clear on this point.”
 
Brazil’s journalists are exposed to a great deal of violence in certain regions, especially when they work for local, community or alternative media. The same applies to bloggers. Since the start of the year, a total of four journalists have been killed in direct or probable connection with their work. Real efforts have been made to combat impunity in such cases but with mixed results.

Three serious cases of violence against journalists in different regions were reported within a few days of each other earlier this month. They require an urgent response from the authorities, Reporters say.

The first was on October 3, when shots were fired at the home of Cid Ferreira, the host of political and social programs on community radio Araibú FM in Russas, in the northeastern state of Ceará.

Two days later, shots were fired at the car of Sérgio Ricardo de Almeida da Luz, a radio reporter who covers crime in Toledo, in the southern state of Paraná.

Finally, on October 9, journalist Antonio Carlos Ferrari was attacked in public in Itaporã, in the southwestern state of Mato Grosso do Sul, by two members of a rural land-owning family accused of using slave labor.

Tags:

You May Also Like

Portuguese Trailblazer

Prof. Haydée Magro’s textbooks were adopted at numerous colleges and universities in the United ...

US and EU Mark Presence at Brazil’s Industrial Eco Fair

The 8th International Industrial Environment Fair (Fimai) starts today in São Paulo, in southeastern ...

A couple from Brazil's Northeast

20,000 Rich Families Rule Brazil, But the Poorest Elect the President

According to polls, Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has emerged unscathed from ...

Brazil Close to a Deal on AIDS Drug with Abbott

Brazil continues to negotiate AIDS drug prices with multinational pharmaceutical laboratories. At the moment, ...

Air Traffic Grows 13% in Brazil

Air traffic continues its expansion in Brazil. According to data released by the National ...

Brazil Renews Pact With US’s CDC

Brazil’s National Secretary of Health Oversight, Jarbas Barbosa, said, December 15, that the partnership ...

Despite Brazil and Mercosur, Miami Vies to Become FTAA’s Headquarters

Recent trade developments in the Americas continue to renew prospects for a hemisphere-wide trade ...

Can Lula End Hunger?

John FitzpatrickBy John Fitzpatrick The beaming, benevolent face of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva ...

After All-Time High, Brazilian Market Tumbles

Brazilian and Latin American bourses fell on profit taking this Friday. In the U.S., ...

Brazil’s First Astronaut Celebrates Brazilian Aviation’s Father

A new, two-man crew of the International Space Station (ISS) and a Brazilian astronaut ...