Another journalist was shot to death in Mexico on Tuesday, the eighth murdered so far this year in an unprecedented spate of killings that has made Mexico the most dangerous place in the world for the press.
Reporters and photographers have been murdered this year in Mexico at the rate of almost one a week, despite claims from the government that the situation is under control.
Prosecutors in the western state of Michoacan said reporter Armando Linares was shot to death at a home in the town of Zitacuaro. His killing came six weeks after the slaying of a colleague, Roberto Toledo, from the same outlet Monitor Michoacan. It was Linares who announced Toledo's death Jan. 31 in a video posted to social media.
Zitacuaro is one of the closest towns to the monarch butterfly wintering grounds in the mountains west of Mexico City.
The area has been plagued by illegal logging and drug gangs, local governance disputes and deforestation linked to expanding avocado production. Logging has damaged the pine and fir forests where the butterflies spend the winter after migrating from the United States and Canada.
Linares served as director at the Monitor Michoacan website, which on Tuesday continued to show an article he had written about a cultural festival celebrating monarch butterflies.
There was no immediate information on a possible motive in the killing.
Toledo, a camera operator and video editor for Monitor Michoacan, was shot Jan. 31 as he prepared for an interview in Zitacuaro.
At the time of Toledo's death, Linares told The Associated Press he had received several death threats after enrolling in a government journalist protection program.
Asked who he thought was behind the threats, Linares said "they pass themselves off as an armed group, they pass themselves off as a criminal gang. We can't verify whether it is true or not that they are this armed gang."
Criminals in Mexico often claim they are part of a drug cartel in order to instill fear in their victims, whether or not they really are.
"We have organized crime, just like in the rest of the country, and Monitor worked on a lot of issues like illegal logging, given that we are near the monarch reserve," Linares said in early February. "We wrote a lot about illegal logging and also a lot of issues like corruption in the municipal government."
Drug cartels in Mexico often make money by protecting illegal logging, or extorting protection payments from avocado growers.
"The nightmare continues for the press in Mexico," the press group Reporters Without Borders wrote in its social media accounts.
Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador has reacted angrily to worldwide criticism of the killings.
In February, López Obrador said U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken was misinformed, after Blinken wrote: "I join those calling for greater accountability and protections for Mexican journalists."
López Obrador claims the government is investigating all of the killings and suggested Blinken received bad information from other U.S. agencies, mentioning the CIA, FBI and Drug Enforcement Administration.
"They're tricking him," he said. "We don't tolerate the impunity of anyone."
And last week, López Obrador issued an irate response to European Parliament criticism of journalist killings in Mexico, accusing the Europeans of having a "colonialist mentality."
The Mexican president criticized EU support for Ukraine, and called European Parliament members "sheep."
"It is unfortunate that you vote like sheep to join the reactionary and coup-mongering strategy of the corrupt group opposed to the Fourth Transformation," as López Obrador calls his administration, he wrote in an open letter to the parliament.
The EU Parliament approved a resolution last Thursday urging López Obrador to stop his harsh verbal attacks on reporters who criticize him, and ensure their safety.
Press groups say López Obrador's daily criticisms of journalists, whom he calls "conservatives" and "mercenaries," make them more vulnerable to violence.
In February, the Inter American Press Association called on the president to "immediately suspend the aggressions and insults, because such attacks from the top of power encourage violence against the press."
The EU resolution "calls on the authorities, and in particular the highest ones, to refrain from issuing any communication which could stigmatize human rights defenders, journalists and media workers, exacerbate the atmosphere against them or distort their lines of investigation."
Journalists are often the targets of Mexico's drug cartels, which seek to intimidate and manipulate coverage of their activities and their rivals. Local politicians and government officials are also frequently linked to murders, according to the government, which has acknowledged that impunity in those killings runs above 90%.
In early March, gunmen killed Juan Carlos Muñiz, who covered crime for the online news site Testigo Minero in the state of Zacatecas.
Jorge Camero, the director of an online news site who was until recently a municipal worker in the northern state of Sonora, was killed in late February.
In early February, Heber López, director of the online news site Noticias Web, was shot to death in the southern state of Oaxaca.
Reporter Lourdes Maldonado López was found shot to death inside her car in Tijuana on Jan. 23. In a news conference in 2019, Maldonado Lopez told Mexico's president she feared for her life.
Crime photographer Margarito Martínez was gunned down outside his Tijuana home on Jan. 17. Guillermo Arias, whose photographs chronicle life and death in the streets of Tijuana, worked with Martinez for many years.
He recalled the painful experience of covering the murder of his friend and fellow journalist.
"His daughter arrived and asked me not to photograph her dad's body," Arias told CBS News.
Reporter José Luis Gamboa was killed in the Gulf coast state of Veracruz on Jan. 10.
More than 150 journalists have been killed in Mexico since 2000, and over 90% of those murders remain unpunished, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists. Most journalists are often targeted for exposing corrupt officials and criminal gangs, the committee has said.
This article was first published in CBS News . All contents and images are copyright to their respective owners and sources.
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