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Mexico: Eighth victim of a journalist shooting in Mexico.

On Tuesday, another journalist was killed in Mexico.

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Mexico: Eighth victim of a journalist shooting in Mexico.

This is the eighth victim of this unprecedented wave of murders which has made Mexico the most dangerous country for journalists.

Mexico has been killing reporters and photographers at a rate of nearly one per week this year, despite government claims that the situation is under control.

According to western Michoacan's prosecutor, reporter Armando Linares was killed at Zitacuaro's home. Six weeks later, he was killed by Roberto Toledo. This happened at the same outlet Monitor Michoacan. Linares posted a video to social media on January 31st revealing Toledo's death.

Zitacuaro, Mexico's closest town to the monarch butterfly wintering ground in the mountains west side of Mexico City, is Zitacuaro.

This area has been plagued with illegal logging, drug gangs and local governance disputes. There is also deforestation due to the expansion of avocado production. The pine and fir forests are where butterflies spend their winters after migrating from Canada and the United States.

Linares was the Monitor Michoacan director. The website displayed on Tuesday an article Linares had written about a cultural festival that celebrates monarch butterflies.

It was not immediately clear what the motive for the murder might be.

Toledo, a monitor michoacan camera operator and video editor, was captured Jan. 31, as he prepared to interview in Zitacuaro.

Linares claimed to The Associated Press that he received numerous death threats following his enrollment in a government program for journalist protection.

Linares answered a question about who was behind the threats. He said that they were an armed group masquerading as a criminal gang. We don't know if it is true that they are this armed group.

Mexican criminals often claim to be part of a drug cartel, in an attempt to instill fear among their victims.

Linares stated that "we have organized crime, just as in the rest of country and Monitor worked on many issues like illegal logging, considering we are near to the monarch reserve." We wrote a lot on illegal logging, as well as many issues such corruption in municipal government.

Mexican drug cartels often profit from illegal logging or by extorting protection payments for avocado growers.

Reporters Without Borders posted on its social media that "The nightmare continues in Mexico for the press,"


 

Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, the Mexican president, has angrily reacted to international criticism of the killings.

Lopez Obrador claimed that U.S. Secretary Of State Antony Blinken was misinformed in February. Blinken had written: "I join those who call for greater accountability and protections of Mexican journalists."

Lopez Obrador asserts that the government is investigating all the killings. He suggested that Blinken was given bad information by other U.S. agencies, including the CIA, FBI, and Drug Enforcement Administration.

He said, "They're tricking them." "We won't tolerate impunity."

Last week Lopez Obrador responded furiously to European Parliament criticisms of Mexican journalist killings, accusing Europeans of having "colonialist mentality."

Mexican President criticized EU support of Ukraine and called European Parliament members "sheep".

Lopez Obrador wrote to parliament, "It is regrettable that you vote as sheep to join the reactionary coup-mongering strategy for the corrupt group opposed the Fourth Transformation."

Last Thursday, the EU Parliament passed a resolution urging Lopez Obrador not to use harsh words against reporters who criticize him and to ensure their safety.

According to press groups, Lopez Obrador's constant criticisms of journalists (who he calls "conservatives and "mercenaries") make them more vulnerable.

The Inter American Press Association urged the president to immediately suspend aggressions and insults in February because they encourage violence against journalists.

"The EU resolution calls on all authorities, including the highest, to refrain from issuing communications that could stigmatize journalists, human rights defenders and media workers, or exacerbate their investigation lines."

Mexico's drug cartels often target journalists, who are trying to manipulate media coverage and intimidate their rivals. According to the government, local politicians and government officials are often linked to murders.

Juan Carlos Muniz was a reporter for Testigo Minero, an online news site that covers crime in Zacatecas. He was shot and killed by gunmen early March.

Jorge Camero was the director of an online news website and was a municipal worker in Sonora's northern state until recently. He was shot to death in February.

Heber Lopez was killed in Oaxaca, the southern state of Oaxaca, when he was working as director of Noticias Web.

Reporter Lourdes Lopez was shot to death in her Tijuana car on January 23. Maldonado Lopez, a Mexican president, said she feared for her safety at a 2019 news conference.

Margarito Martnez, a crime photographer, was shot to death outside his Tijuana residence on Jan. 17. Martinez's photographer Guillermo Arias has been photographing life and death on the streets of Tijuana for many years.

He was still adamant about the difficult experience of reporting on the murder of his journalist friend.

Arias stated that her father's daughter visited and asked me to not photograph his body.

Jose Luis Gamboa, a reporter from Veracruz, was shot to death on January 10.

According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, more than 150 journalists were killed in Mexico between 2000 and 2005. More than 90% of these murders have not been prosecuted. The committee stated that journalists are often targeted because they expose corrupt officials or criminal gangs.


 

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