3 journalists kidnapped in Taxco, Guerrero have been released
Three Guerrero-based journalists who were abducted last week have been released, but the son of one of them is still missing.
The Guerrero Attorney Generalβs Office (FGE) reported Saturday that Marco Antonio Toledo, Silvia Nayssa Arce AvilΓ©s and Alberto SΓ‘nchez JuΓ‘rez had all been released.
Guadalupe Denova Flores, the wife of Toledo, was also released, but their 28-year-old son Alberto Toledo Denova is apparently still being held by his abductors and a search to locate him is ongoing.
The FGE said that the three journalists and Denova were released due to βthe strengthening of search operations and the deployment of federal and state security authorities in the northern regionβ of Guerrero.
Toledo, director of the news magazine Espectador de Taxco, was abducted along with his wife and son by armed men who broke into his home in the municipality of Taxco on Nov. 19.
Arce and SΓ‘nchez, a married couple who run the news outlet RedSiete, were kidnapped by armed men last Wednesday in Taxco, a popular tourism destination less than 200 kilometers from Mexico City.
All three journalists had received threats prior to their abduction.
Toledo, who wrote for other Guerrero media outlets in addition to managing Espectador de Taxco, reported on political and security issues.
βHe recently published an article in which he condemned the municipal governmentβs approval of a budget for a public work in Taxco,β press freedom advocacy organization Article 19 said.
That organization noted that cell phones and computers were removed from Toledoβs home by the armed men who abducted him.
Arce previously shut down another news site she ran due to threats she received from organized crime, according to the El Universal newspaper.
Leopoldo Maldonado GutiΓ©rrez, director of Article 19 in Mexico, said in a radio interview that violence against the press is a particular problem in Guerrero, a poor southern state known for lawlessness in certain areas.
βViolence is rampant in a large part of the country, like in Guanajuato and Tamaulipas, and in Guerrero [there is] specific violence against the press,β he said.
βWe have to remember that Guerrero ranks fifth [among Mexicoβs 32 federal entities] for the number of attacks β¦ against the press,β Maldonado said citing data for the period between 2009 and 2023.
Article 19 reported in September that an act of aggression against Mexican media workers and organizations was committed every 16 hours on average during the first half of 2023.
The organization also said that 161 journalists have been murdered in Mexico since 2000, including 41 during the current federal administration.
With reports from El PaΓs, El Universal,Β El Economista and Reforma
Source: Mexico News Daily