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Friday 27 January 2012 by IFEX
24 January 2012
According to the journalist, during one of the calls she was told:
"We already know that you have three children and the oldest one is
fifteen. Right now you are walking down the street with your
seven-year-old son while the oldest girl is in your home, taking care of
the one-year-old. We are going to kill you."
The journalist immediately hung up but then got a second call from
the same number. One of her colleagues responded and berated the
unidentified caller for the cowardly way in which Silvestrucci and her
family were being threatened.
When the journalist called her home, her oldest daughter told her
that a man had telephoned to inquire what time Silvestrucci normally
went home.
A few days prior, the journalist’s mother had also received a call
from someone requesting the Silvestrucci’s mobile phone number and
information on the journalist’s schedule and places she frequents.
Silvestrucci is an active member of the women’s collective
“Periodistas por la Vida y la Libertad de Expresión” ("Journalists for
Life and Freedom of Expression"). On 21 December 2011, the collective
filed a formal complaint with the Human Rights Prosecutor against
President Porfirio Lobo Sosa, the Armed Forces Chief of Staff, General
René Arnoldo Osorio Canales, and General Andrés Felipe Díaz, Chief of
the Presidential Guard. The officials are accused of abusing their
authority and violating a number of rights upheld by the Constitution.
A few days after the complaint was filed, Silvestrucci was heading
to work in a taxi when the taxi driver informed her that they had been
followed by another vehicle since they left her house. Luckily, the taxi
driver was able to dodge the vehicle that was pursuing them.
C-Libre notes that since President Lobo Sosa came to power, 17
communications professionals have been killed. Thus far, none of the
cases have been solved and therefore any potential links to the
individuals’ profession cannot be discounted.
In the chapter on Honduras of its 2012 World Report, Human Rights
Watch comments on the assassinations and attacks on journalists since
Lobo Sosa came to power. The organisation concludes: "The individuals
responsible for most of these crimes have not been identified or
charged. In March 2011 the minister for human rights told the United
Nations Human Rights Council that four cases were in court and six were
still under investigation. Several government officials, including the
minister of security and the minister of justice and human rights, have
rejected suggestions that the killings were related to the victims’
professional activities."
(Please note this is an abridged translation.)
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