Pablo Medina Velázquez (c. 1961 – 16 October 2014) was a Paraguayan investigative journalist for the newspaper ABC Color in Asunción. Velázquez had been returning from a trip to Curuguaty when he was attacked due to his investigation into the illegal drug trade in Paraguay.[1][2][3] Medina is one of many journalists whose lives have been put at risk due to their involvement into dangerous cases. Medina's death sparked social movements, such as #JusticiaparaPablo on Facebook, as well as memorials in his honor.[4][5]
Pablo Medina Velázquez | |
---|---|
Born | ca. 1961 |
Died | 16 October 2014 (Age 53) Curuguaty, Paraguay |
Cause of death | Gunshot |
Occupation(s) | Journalist, regional correspondent |
Employer | ABC Color |
Known for | investigative journalism into drug trafficking |
Children | Dyrsen Medina |
Family | Salvador Medina Velázquez (brother) and Francisco Medina (brother) |
Personal
editMedina had been working for the company, ABC Color, when he was investigating and reporting on drug trafficking in Paraguay.[6] During his investigations, Medina had received death threats because of his closeness to various cases.[1] Medina was not the only person in his family to undergo threats because of dangerous cases. Medina's brother, Salvador Medina Velázquez, was also investigating drug trafficking when he had died thirteen years ago.[6] After Medina's death, seminars and marches were held in Asuncíon in his honor to remember him and his work.[4]
Career
editPablo Medina Velázquez had been reporting on the drug trade happening in Paraguay when he was killed during a trip back to Asunción from Curuguaty.[7] Medina is one of many journalists that have attempted to report on drug trafficking in Paraguay.[3]
Death
editSince Medina had been receiving death threats due to his involvement into investigating drug trafficking, he had been assigned police protection.[1] However, he was not under protection when he was shot four times in the chest and face by two gunmen on a motorcycle.[5][2] Medina's death is recorded as being around 2:30 p.m. on October 16, 2014.[2] Medina was riding with two women, one of which, his assistant, was also killed during the attack.[8] The third woman, the assistant's sister, survived the attack and was the one who called for help afterwards.[8]
After his death, an investigation into the perpetrators was started and investigators have since confirmed that it was by order of the mafia running the drug traffic.[2] Although the gunmen are still free, the leader who ordered the murder, Vilmar Neneco Marques, is currently in prison in Brazil.[4]
Context
editDrug trafficking in areas of Paraguay are intense areas of investigation and journalism for reporters. Canindeyú itself is cited as being a site of violent land disputes in the past.[9] In particular, the case that Medina was investigating was of a very large marijuana operation in Paraguay.[10] His killing has motivated the justice department in the area to investigate further into the drug trafficking crimes on the rise.[11] The Secretary General of SPP, Santiago Ortíz, has come out and said that Paraguayan society is living in a state of narco-politics that will eventually destroy the social base of Paraguay.[6] Thus, it is important that the country looks at these cases and attempts to further stop them.
Impact
editMedina's killing due to his investigation came amidst a dangerous time for Paraguayan journalists. Other journalists who were investigating the country's drug trade as well as judicial corruption, Fausto Gabriel Alcaraz and Edgar Pantaleon Fernandez Fleitas, respectively, were killed in Paraguay that same year.[6] The executive director of the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists, Joel Simon, has comes out and said that journalists are unquestionably under greater threat than ever.[5]
Reactions
editThe Director-General of UNESCO, Irina Bokova, has spoken about her deep concern over Velázquez and his assistants' killing. She says that it is important that the people who executed this attack be brought to justice not only because of criminality but to possibly deter future killings against journalists.[12]
Paraguayan President Horacio Cartes was also quick to condemn the killing after it happened. He issued a statement shortly afterward citing the attack as threatening the peace of Paraguay as well as a violation of human rights and freedom of expression.[6]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c "Unesco Director-General condemns murder of Paraguayan journalists". San Diego Union-Tribune.
- ^ a b c d ""Se aseguraron de que muera"". ABC Color.
- ^ a b "Notepads, Guns, and Cocaine: The Isolated Life of a Paraguayan Journalist". VICE.
- ^ a b c "CURUGUATY:A 1 año del asesinato de Pablo Medina: "La narcopolítica sigue en pie"". capitanbado.com.
- ^ a b c Staley, Oliver (January 9, 2015). "Paris attack highlights broader attempt to silence media". Japan Times Online.
- ^ a b c d e "Paraguayan journalist killed along border with Brazil is third to die this year". knightcenter.
- ^ "Paraguayan journalist shot to death despite being granted police protection". IFEX.
- ^ a b "El intendente implicado en el crimen del periodista paraguayo estuvo en Brasil". infobae.com.
- ^ "Pablo Medina Velázquez". Committee to Protect Journalists. October 16, 2014.
- ^ "Marihuana en supuesta estancia de Neneco". ultimahora.
- ^ "Impunity - Paraguay". Sociedad Interamericana de Prensa/Inter America Press Agency.
- ^ "Director-General denounces killing of Paraguayan journalist Pablo Medina Velázquez and his assistant Antonia Maribel Almada Chamorro". UNESCO.