Yahoo – AFP,
Guillermo Barros, 16 March 2015
![]() |
Mexican
journalist Carmen Aristegui speaks to the press in Mexico City on
March 16,
2015 a day after being fired (AFP Photo/Ronaldo Schemidt)
|
Mexico City
(AFP) - The firing of one of Mexico's most famous journalists, who revealed the
first lady's controversial mansion, sparked outrage Monday among supporters who
consider her sacking an attack on press freedom.
Mexicans
awoke without the familiar morning voice of broadcaster Carmen Aristegui after
MVS Radio fired her late Sunday, following a public feud with her employer over
the dismissal of two of her investigative reporters.
The
top-rated, 51-year-old journalist became the main trending topic on Twitter in
Mexico, with supporters calling on users to unfollow MVS's account.
![]() |
The house
acquired by Mexican First
Lady Angelica Rivera in Mexico City,
shown November
10, 2014 (AFP Photo/
Hector Guerrero)
|
Vowing to
fight back, she warned that her lawyers said her firing was wrong and a
violation of freedom of speech.
Aristegui
said her country is "seeing an authoritarian wind and an ominous sign of
something that we have to avoid."
"This
team of journalists is committed to fighting for freedom of speech," she
said, adding that her firing appeared to have been planned well in advance,
"with much resources and much power."
Denying it
was curbing freedom of speech, MVS said it parted ways with Aristegui because
it could not tolerate her "conditions and ultimatums" after she
demanded her fired colleagues' reinstatement.
MVS said
the two journalists had been fired for using the company's name without
permission in their participation in MexicoLeaks, a website created by civic
groups and other media outlets to receive leaked documents related to
corruption.
Lavish
mansion
Aristegui's
investigative team revealed last year that President Enrique Pena Nieto's wife,
former soap opera star Angelica Rivera, had bought a Mexico City mansion from a
government contractor.
The story
sparked allegations of conflict of interest, which the president denied, adding
more headaches to Pena Nieto as he faced protests over the presumed massacre of
43 missing college students.
Aristegui
said her two fired colleagues had been investigating Finance Minister Luis
Videgaray's purchase of a house from the same government contractor as well as
the alleged summary execution of gang suspects by soldiers.
Pena
Nieto's spokesman could not be reached for comment about Aristegui's sacking.
Dario
Ramirez, director of the media rights group Article 19, said the reasons behind
Aristegui's dismissal were suspicious amid an "atmosphere of
censorship."
"It
was a machiavellian firing," Ramirez told AFP, saying that the move points
to "displeasure from the government, with the complicity of a private
company."
![]() |
Angelica
Rivera, wife of Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto, attends a banquet
at the
Guildhall in central London on March 4, 2015 (AFP Photo/Justin Tallis)
|
Fans
angry
Aristegui's
supporters swiftly voiced their discontent on social media, with the hashtag
#EndefensadeAristegui2 (#InDefenseOfAristegui2).
"Carmen
Aristegui is an essential voice in our public life. Her departure from MVS
seriously damages freedom of speech in Mexico," leading historian Enrique
Krauze wrote on Twitter.
Renowned
political pundit Denise Dresser announced she would no longer appear on MVS,
while actor Diego Luna lamented Aristegui's firing.
"What
sadness that from tomorrow @AristeguiOline will not have a space in this
country that demands plurality and voices that challenge us," Luna
tweeted.
Leftist
Senator Alejandro Encinas called it a "hard blow for the kind of
journalism our country needs."
The radio
station's website was briefly hacked on Saturday.
Aristegui
had been fired once before by MVS in 2011, when she demanded a government
reaction after a lawmaker accused then president Felipe Calderon, without
proof, of having a drinking problem.
MVS said
she had been fired for violating ethics, but she claimed that the presidency
had applied pressure.



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