VENEZUELA: Journalist arrested at TV
station
New York, March 6, 2006—The Committee to Protect Journalists is
concerned by the arrest today on fraud charges of a Venezuelan journalist
known for his criticism of state authorities. Gustavo Azócar Alcalá was
arrested in the western state of Táchira minutes after finishing a daily
show he hosts on the San Cristóbal-based TV station Televisora del Táchira,
a station spokesperson told CPJ. Azócar is also the Táchira correspondent
for the Caracas-based daily El Universal.
The state attorney general’s office said that the arrest warrant was issued
based on Azócar’s failure to appear before a local court on charges of fraud
filed in 2000. The journalist, who was then working for private radio
station Radio Noticias 1060, was accused of irregularities in the assignment
of advertising in a contract signed with the state lottery agency, the local
press said.
Táchira state attorney general Ana Casanova filed the complaint against
Azócar when she was working as a legal adviser to the lottery, El Universal
reported. The Táchira state police told CPJ that the arrest had nothing to
do with Azócar’s journalistic work.
However, Jesús Vivas Terán, Azócar’s lawyer, told CPJ the local government
was using the fraud allegations to silence his client, who has been critical
of local authorities in general, and of Governor Ronald Blanco La Cruz in
particular.
“They are using a bogus argument with the intention of taking him off the
air,” said Azócar’s lawyer.
As he was being arrested, Azócar told the Caracas-based television station
Globovisión, that Governor Blanco had ordered his arrest in retaliation for
his work.
“A well respected journalist has made a serious allegation that his arrest
is politically motivated,” said CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper.
“Venezuelan authorities must conduct a full and prompt investigation into
this allegation and meanwhile free Gustavo Azócar Alcalá.”
http://www.cpj.org/news/2006/americas/ven06mar06na.html