CARACAS, Tuesday March 25, 2008 | Update
A special delegation of IAPA visited Venezuela last November to assess the implications of President Chávez's proposed changes to the Constitution, which were rejected in a referendum in December 2007 (Photo: Eduardo Fuentes / El Universal)
EL UNIVERSAL
The Inter-American Press Association (IAPA) next March 28-30
is holding its half-yearly meeting in Caracas to assess both
the breakthroughs and regressions of press freedom in the
hemisphere, particularly in Cuba, Bolivia, and Venezuela,
IAPA sources said.
IAPA executive director Julio Muñoz told Efe that during
the meeting in the Venezuelan capital city they are to voice
concern about the situation facing the countries where the
press media are under threats and "certain" attacks.
"Obviously, we are going to delve into the situations facing
each of the countries. Over the last few years, attention
has focused on Cuba, where a number of reporters are in jail,"
Muñoz stressed.
Bolivia is also in the spotlight, as the country is going
through "a very serious situation," said Muñoz, between
the government and the news media.
In his view, in Bolivia the press is filing complaints with
international bodies rejecting "the government aggressions
in that country."
Ecuador, Nicaragua, and Venezuela will also be under close
scrutiny by some 300 representatives of the news media in
the hemisphere who are expected to attend the meeting.
Venezuela was at the center of the IAPA Annual Meeting held
in Miami last October, after the shutdown of private television
station Radio Caracas Televisión.
The oldest TV channel in Venezuela -which operated for 53
years- stopped broadcasts last May 27 at midnight, after the
Venezuelan government decided not to renew the relevant license
for broadcasting on open signal.
The IAPA directors hope this topic does not top the agenda
of the Caracas half-yearly meeting to be held this week.
Venezuela "is one of the countries facing a difficult situation
for the press, yet it is not the only one. We are not interest
in shifting the focus 100 percent to Venezuela, but to review
the situation in other countries as well," Muñoz stressed.
President Hugo Chávez was sent an invitation to open
the IAPA meeting, but he has not confirmed his attendance.
The IAPA also invited Venezuelan Communication and Information
Minister Andrés Izarra.
Muñoz noticed that the IAPA hopes "to receive some kind
of answer and to have some sort of representation of the Venezuelan
Executive Branch in the assembly."
Translated by Maryflor Suárez R.
04:20 PM. Western Hemisphere. Colombian President Álvaro Uribe said on Tuesday that governments should ensure citizens' rights to live on the border, in reference to a political and diplomatic crisis with Venezuela and its effects on border residents.