Cartel blog del narco
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“I was very impressed with it, it seems realistic,” says Homero Gil de Zúñiga, director of community, journalism and communication research at the University of Texas in Austin, adding that verifying information posted on this and other blogs is difficult. Security forces arrested the warden after the blog published the video.
#Cartel blog del narco free#
The narco blog has broken some major stories, including a video where a prison warden exposed her alleged system for setting inmates free at night to carry out murders for a drug gang. And that isn’t surprising followers of the Twitter page and Facebook group linked to the site include the US FBI, Mexico’s Department of Defence and major international news outlets. “International media outlets use the images and information from the site to report on what is happening,” Perez told Al Jazeera. While experts and average people criticise the mainstream press, there is clearly an appetite for the narco blog’s coverage.
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#Cartel blog del narco tv#
Mexicans are more likely to own a television set than to have access to running water but two TV stations – Televisa and TV Azteca – control 94 per cent of television entertainment content, according to the Mexican Right to Information Association. Like most large scale industries in Mexico, the media – particularly television stations – are highly concentrated in a few hands. Most mainstream media companies in Mexico have an agreement not to publish information which could endanger security forces “The media in Mexico are commercial enterprises and their first concern is with the bottom line,” she told Al Jazeera. “Individuals journalists are doing the best they can, but in general I don’t think the media has done a fair job in covering drug violence,” says Lucila Vargas, a professor of journalism at the University of North Carolina who studies Mexico’s media landscape. While much of Mexico’s mainstream media, especially television stations and local newspapers, has shied away from covering killings and naming the cartels involved, the narco blog and its anonymous curator, publish graphic details of spiraling violence. Violence linked to Mexico’s drug war has claimed more than 36,000 lives since President Felipe Calderon declared all-out war on cartels in December 2006. Some recent headlines from the site include: “Entire town taken hostage by Gunmen in Chihuahua” “Eleven year old arrested in Acapulco with AK 47” “Sinaloa cartel welcomes new police chief with tortured body” and “Mass narco grave, 60 bodies found, total 148 corpses”. Al Jazeera decided against publishing pictures from the blog. “Organised crime gangs don’t use it to inform, they use it for issuing threats.” “The narco blog uses much of the information citizens upload to other social networking sites,” says Pedro Perez, president of the democratic union of journalists in Tamaulipas, one of the states on the US-Mexico border hit hardest by drug violence. You have reached Mexico’s narco blog: Click to continue. The images are gruesome and unedited: a dead man in a sports jersey with his face covered in dried red blood and grey sand a woman hanging from a rope above a busy urban over-pass and naked bodies lined up on the ground displaying clear, uncensored, signs of torture. More than 36,000 people have died in drug violence since 2006