Journalist kidnapped and killed in northern Mexico
By Olga R. Rodriguez
Topics: From the Wires, News
MEXICO CITY (AP) — The tortured body of a Mexican police reporter was found on the side of a road in the drug cartel-plagued state of Sinaloa on Friday, a day after he was kidnapped by gunmen while waiting at a car wash, authorities said.
Marco Antonio Avila Garcia’s body was found inside a black plastic bag near the city of Empalme, about 68 miles (110 kilometers) south Ciudad Obregon, where he was abducted, said Sonora state prosecutors’ spokesman Jose Larrinaga.
Larrianga said police also found a message signed by a cartel, but he wouldn’t reveal the message’s content. Sinaloa is home state to the powerful drug cartel of the same name led by Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, Mexico’s most wanted fugitive.
The 39-year-old reporter often wrote about organized crime for the sister newspapers Diario Sonora de la Tarde and El Regional, said Larrinaga.
Eduardo Flores, director of the newspapers, told The Associated Press that Avila wrote about drug trafficking but never mentioned cartels by name nor did investigative pieces.
“He wrote about drug trafficking, but nothing involved” about them, Flores said.
Flores told the press group Articulo 19 that Avila was among the most experienced police reporters on his staff and that he didn’t know if the journalist had received threats. No threats had been received by the newspapers, he added.
Avila was snatched Thursday by three masked gunmen as he waited for his car to be washed in Ciudad Obregon. He was forced him into a waiting pickup truck.
Mexico has become one of the world’s most dangerous countries for journalists in recent years, with media workers disproportionately targeted as a government offensive against drug cartels and rivalry among crime gangs have resulted in tens of thousands of killings, kidnappings and extortion cases.
Last week, gunmen opened fire on the offices of the El Manana newspaper in the border city of Nuevo Laredo. The week before, police found the mutilated bodies of three photojournalists inside plastic bags dumped in a canal in the Gulf coast state of Veracruz.
Prosecutions in journalist killings are rarely carried out, which is generally the case with most homicides and other serious crimes in Mexico.
Mexico’s National Commission on Human Rights says 79 journalists were killed between 2000 and 2011. In addition, it said 14 of them have disappeared. Other press freedom groups differ with that number.
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