MEXICO CITY — International press groups expressed concern Tuesday about a spike in the number of journalists killed in Mexico, after three were murdered within the space of 10 days.
The Committee to Protect Journalists, Reporters Without Borders and the Inter American Press Association urged Mexico to do more to investigate the killings and protect journalists.
The CPJ lists Mexico as the deadliest country in the world for journalists in 2020; the IAPA says ten media workers have been killed in Mexico so far this year.
On Monday, gunmen killed a reporter for a local news site while he was covering a story in Guanajuato. On Nov. 2, a man shot to death online reporter and photographer Jesús Alfonso Piñuelas in the northern state of Sonora. On Oct. 29, television journalist Arturo Alba Medina was shot to death in the border city of Ciudad Juárez, across from El Paso, Texas.
Emmanuel Colombié, the Latin America director for Reporters Without Borders, said in the states most plagued by corruption and organized crime, journalists are ever more vulnerable and more exposed to reprisals.
Inter American Press Association President Jorge Canahuati, said "it is outrageous that journalists continue to be killed in Mexico, and that the crime against them and their relatives is compounded by a lack of justice."
On Monday, gunmen killed Israel Vázquez Rangel, a reporter for the online newspaper El Salmantino while he was covering a story in Guanajuato, the state with the most homicides in Mexico.
Vázquez Rangel showed up at a scene in the city of Salamanca where body parts had reportedly been left on a street. He reportedly arrived in a car with news site's logo. Apparently, the killers were still there when he arrived, and two men opened fire on him.