Friday, March 25, 2011

Dry Cm Week Before Period

page previous figure murdered in Mexico

Televisa, the largest Mexican television network, today confirmed the fatal shooting of one of its presenters kidnapped on Thursday, along with two other people, about streets of the channel's offices located in the northern city of Monterrey.
chain TV news announced in the body of TV host Jose Luis Cerda, known as "Cat", was located this morning on an avenue in the Monterrey metropolitan area, handcuffed and with several gun shots. Televisa
said Thursday night that a criminal group that circulated in a van abducted Cerda, who was accompanied by a relative and a journalist from the city of Monclova.
The presenter had just finished his participation in the Journal Club and walked with his entourage to his car, parked two blocks from the headquarters of the company, when the criminals at gunpoint and boarded a van to flee the scene. It was unclear
whereabouts of two others abducted by criminals.
Monterrey is one of the cities hardest hit by the wave of violence in Mexico and this city is the scene of a war between drug cartels and Los Zetas Gulf since March 2010.
Mexico is considered the most dangerous country for journalists America, and the third in the world after Pakistan and Iraq, according to several reporters and organizations defending freedom of expression.
Just yesterday, fifty groups of Mexican media, which together have more than 700 newspaper companies, they agreed to follow a set of common criteria to cover organized crime violence plaguing the country from becoming "in" involuntary spokesmen "of criminals.
As part of this agreement, in case a reporter or media suffer threats to influence its editorial and other media information content pledged solidarity against these pressures, in the terms that best suit the reporter or environment concerned.
to protect journalists, the media also agreed "not to sign the notes on" violence, to make joint efforts with other media coverage and avoid "live reports from the most violent areas.
In 2010 in Mexico, seven journalists were killed and eight others were kidnapped, according to Reporters Without Borders (RSF).

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