No Safe Place for Media in Mexico after latest Murder of Journalist, Says IFJ

The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) today expressed its deep consternation and shock following the murder of Mexican Journalist Norberto Miranda Madrid, Director of Radio Vision's Web page, who was gunned down in the Mexican town of Casas Grandes, in Chihuahua State. The Federation says the killing confirmed that Mexican journalists are no longer safe from violence, not even inside the newsrooms. 

Norberto, a crime reporter, was shot dead, execution style, on Thursday 24 September in his radio's newsroom in the town of Casas Grandes on the Mexican border with United States, by a commando group of five heavily armed men who station around ten in the evening.

 "We condemn this latest appalling crime against Mexican journalists and demand that authorities offer full guarantee to our colleagues who need to exercise their professional tasks in safety", said Gregorio Salazar, Director of IFJ Latin America Office. "This murder, committed at work place, has shown there is no safe place for journalists in Mexico. Our colleagues in Mexico are denied fundamental rights by criminal gangs and drug traffickers."

According to witness reports confirmed by official sources, Norberto Miranda Madrid, who was also a columnist for the a number of Mexican dailies under the penname of El Gallito  died on the spot after having been shot several times with assault weapons and   guns.

I recent weeks, Miranda Madrid reported on crime in the North West area of the state, especially in Casas Grandes, located 180 km of Ciudad Juarez, where at least 25 people have been murdered during the month of September. Several journalists reported fled to the United States of America in 2008 after he had received death threats in Mexico.

For more information contact the IFJ at +32 2 235 2207

The IFJ represents over 600,000 journalists in 123 countries worldwide