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Journalists Protest Ends with Tear Gas

Click here for photos from Tuesday’s protest.

EFE – Several people were beaten by police and troops here Tuesday during a protest to demand justice for the 24 journalists murdered in Honduras over the last eight years, including 17 slain since January 2010.

Some 40 news professionals marched from the eastern part of Tegucigalpa to the presidential palace, where soldiers and cops responded with batons and tear gas when the protesters tried to get around a security barrier.
The demonstrators then laid down on the pavement at the entrance to the palace’s parking lot.
“That’s how they want us, they want us quiet and asleep,” said one of the organizers of the protest, Claudia Mendoza. “We denounce … the aggression against journalists displayed by the government.”
The idea for the demonstration came from a group of woman journalists who work for alternative media outlets and in government agencies.
Since the June 2009 coup that toppled President Mel Zelaya, killings of reporters “have increased with a criminal pattern that endangers life and the practice of journalism,” the protesters said in a statement.

They also demanded punishment for the “white-collar assassins” behind assaults on the freedom of expression and information and on the liberty of “Hondurans in general.”

President Porfirio Lobo’s press secretary said the palace did not order police and troops to break up the protest.

“We will investigate who gave the order to repress the journalists,” Miguel Angel Bonilla told reporters.

Lobo took office in January 2010 after winning an election organized by the junta that ousted Zelaya. Turnout was low following a campaign marked by suppression of independent media and violence against opponents of the coup.

Journalists March in Front of Presidential House

Journalists marched in protest today in front of the Presidential House in Tegucigalpa.

The media personnel demanded a cease to the violence, and respect for the freedom of expression. “Justice! Justice! Justice!,” journalists shouted as they marched toward the President’s home.

A contingent of anti-riot police surrounded the Presidential House. Ultimately, the police resorted to disbursing participants with tear gas.

Last Friday, similar protests were held in both San Pedro Sula and Tegucigalpa.

Protests in San Pedro Sula and Tegucigalpa

Human rights organizations, church representatives, store owners, businessmen, lawyers, and others joined journalists in San Pedro Sula and Tegucigalpa to demand justice for the targeted group.

The most recent murder of radio journalist Luz Marina Paz has sparked outrage among citizens across Honduras, who are seeing cold blooded murder being used as a remedy to quiet those who exercise their right to free speech.

Signs were held at the march such as, “Truth is not killed by murdering journalists.” Protesters condemned the crimes and threats against media personnel, and demanded the government put a stop to these attacks.

Congress has attempted to band-aid Honduras’s crime wave by passing two measures, the first one would be implemented temporarily, for a period of six months, and prohibits more than one person on the same motorcycle. The other is a far more stringent assault on the freedom of speech, and allows for officials to wiretap and record conversations of suspected criminals.

President Porifiro Lobo is currently out of the country, but upon his return, must decide if he will sign the bills into law.