Peruvian journalist receives threatening messages, demands to stop reporting on local officials
Peru|Free Expression & the Law
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ)
14 December 2021
2 minute read
Peruvian authorities must thoroughly investigate death threats against journalist Jairo Roque Gómez and hold the perpetrators to account, and local officials should refrain from using the countrys outdated defamation laws to threaten reporters.
This statement was originally published on cpj.org on 9 December 2021.
Peruvian authorities must thoroughly investigate death threats against journalist Jairo Roque Gómez and hold the perpetrators to account, and local officials should refrain from using the countrys outdated defamation laws to threaten reporters, the Committee to Protect Journalists said today.
On December 1, Roque, editor of the independent Diario Hechicera newspaper in the northern city of Tumbes, published a story about possible irregularities in the contract process to build a public school in Contralmirante Villar, a nearby township, according to Perus National Journalists Association and Roque who spoke to CPJ via messaging app.
A few hours after publishing, Roque received notarized letters from two Contralmirante Villar officials mentioned in the story, Luis Richard Fiestas Chunga and Gian André Miñano Briceño, Roque told CPJ. In the letters, published by Diario Hechicero, Fiestas and Miñano threated to file criminal defamation lawsuits and demanded that Roque stop writing about them and issue a retraction, without specifying what they objected to in his article. In Peru, defamation is a criminal offense punishable by prison.
Later that day, Roque received six Facebook messages from accounts he did not recognize that discouraged him from continuing to report on Contralmirante Villar officials and threatened him if he continued to do so, he told CPJ. Two of the messages were death threats.
More:
https://ifex.org/peruvian-journalist-receives-threatening-messages-demands-to-stop-reporting-on-local-officials/