IFEX
Source: Reporters Without Borders
(RSF/IFEX) - 15 November 2012 - Two journalists are facing sentences of
three months to a year in prison and fines of five to 500 times the
minimum wage in a criminal defamation suit by Canadian textile
multinational Gildan Activewear over reports about harm to the
environment in Guerra, a municipality in Santo Domingo province.
The journalists – Robert Vargas, editor of the Ciudadoriental.org website, and Genris García, editor of the Vigilanteinformativo.com website
– recently posted reports in which local community representatives
blamed deforestation and other environmental damage in the Guerra area
on the multinational's installations and activities.
“Gildan's judicial offensive is an attempt to censor the media,”
Reporters Without Borders said. “The textile multinational is brazenly
trying to stop the dissemination of reports about the environmental harm
it is causing in the region. This it not the first case of its kind and
the decriminalization of media offences is urgently needed so that
journalists in the Dominican Republic can be free to work without
fearing imprisonment.”
The lawsuit has come amid a heated debate about a bill amending the
criminal code and Law 6132 on the Expression and Dissemination of
Opinion. Passed on first reading in the chamber of deputies and senate,
the bill is the subject of protests by the National Union of Press
Workers (SNTP) and Dominican Association of Journalists (CDP).
Condemning the retrograde character of such criminal code articles
as 191 and 193, providing for jail sentences of up to three years and
fines of up to nine times the minimum wage for journalists who criticize
civil servants, the SNTP and CDP are demanding the withdrawal of all
articles criminalizing insult and defamation from the criminal code.
“At a time when all of the decisions by the Inter-American Court of
Human Rights support decriminalization, it would be a major step
backwards for freedom of information if this bill were adopted in its
current form,” Reporters Without Borders added.
“We take note of the statement by Nelson Guillén, the chairman of
the communication commission in the chamber of deputies, who has
promised that the bill will be modified and has said he is joining the
worldwide campaign for the decriminalization of media offences.”
Grenada was the first Caribbean country to decriminalize defamation
(albeit only partially, because “defamation of a seditious nature” is
still a crime).