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Volume 15, Number 15
September 4, 2009

opinion

Also in this section:
Editorials: Prosecuting corruption; Condos and hotels; and Ted Kennedy
Reporters Without Borders, Tribute to slain documentary maker Christian Poveda
Jackson, Where to hold Panama City's Carnival
Bernal, An intrusion into the private sphere
Endara, The company that got the contract for the new locks
Committee to Protect Journalists, Broadcasters attacked in Honduras
Wood, Carbon controversies in Costa Rica
Boscov-Ellen, Brazil's attempts to deal with Rio's slums
Matsunaga, Brazil gains and Colombia doesn't at UNASUR summit
Sanchez, Embraer and Brazil's armaments industry
Amnesty International, Arrest warrants for dozens of Pinochet dictatorship agents
Zibechi, Chile's salmon farms and the privatization of the sea
Green Forum, Overfishing and extinction
Weisbrot, The American people are ahead of their government on US foreign policy
Human Rights Watch, Israel tries to discredit Gaza report with false allegations
Barrow, The nationalization of Belize Telemedia Ltd
Leis, Small screen but big challenge
Sirias, The seldom-mentioned Somoza
Letters to the editor

Death of a journalist who combined professionalism with strong humanistic convictions
Tribute to Christian Poveda, slain in El Salvador
by Reporters Without Borders

Journalists in Spain, France, Latin America and elsewhere are mourning the death of a colleague who paid for his dedication with his life. Franco-Spanish documentary filmmaker Christian Poveda was shot dead early on 2 September in El Salvador, where he had for some time been covering the extremely violent gangs known in Central America as "maras," which have killed other journalists in the past. His film on the maras, "La Vida Loca," is to be premiered in France on 30 September.



Fellow journalist Alain Mingam, a member of the Reporters Without Borders board, said this about his close friend:

"Christian was the son of Spanish Republicans who sought refuge in France. It was from his origins that he derived the strong humanist convictions to which he always remained faithful. He was a reporter in Chile, under the Pinochet dictatorship, in Nicaragua and El Salvador. He was very committed and involved in his subjects without taking sides. His humanistic convictions went hand in hand with a great deal of professional rigor.

"He had an original approach and an incredible ability to penetrate the worlds he was filming, whether AIDS or anti-fascism in France or the Salvadoran maras. For him, the way a film was edited was more important that any comments you made. This was how he restored humanity to people like the 'mareros' regardless of how monstrous their actions were. Christian's personal involvement in his subject even resulted in his being approached by gangs who saw him as a possible mediator."

Poveda's name must nonetheless now be added to the long list of victims of violence between the two main mara groups, "Mara 18" and "Mara Salvatrucha," which is estimated to have cost 3,700 lives last year.

Aged 54, Poveda was found dead near his car on the road from Apopa to Tonacatepeque, in Rosario, a rural area just to the north of the capital, San Salvador. He had been shot in the head. Police said he was on his way from filming in La Campanera, just to the east of the capital.

A life of danger

Christian Gregorio Poveda Ruiz was born in France on 12 January 1955. He established his reputation as a photo-journalist with a report about the POLISARIO Front's war in Western Sahara. Many more reports followed, as well as documentaries that were screened in festivals and broadcast by TV stations.

He began going to El Salvador for the first time in the 1980s to cover the 1980-92 civil war, as a photographer for Time magazine, as a correspondent for French news media and international news agencies. He returned to El Salvador in the 1990s, this time covering the armed gang phenomenon. He also covered wars in Iran, Iraq and Lebanon.

La Vida Loca

Poveda spent 16 months with the gangs in the east San Salvador district of La Campanera in order to make La Vida Loca, which was broadcast for the first time in 2008 and focuses on "Mara 18." Its images are crude and disturbing --- gang members gunned down in the street, the corpses of teenagers, relatives weeping over coffins, young women with their faces covered with tattoos.

According to the local media, Poveda witnessed seven murders in the course of making the film. Three of the seven victims were people who figure prominently in the documentary. Other Mara 18 members who appear in the film were arrested while it was being made.

La Vida Loca also takes a critical look at the strong-arm methods used by the police against the young gang members. While recognizing that they sow terror, it portrays gang-members as victims of broken homes who nonetheless fascinate. It also tries to show how young Salvadorans are pushed into crime by social and economic conditions which, in his view, are too often ignored.

"We must try to understand why a child of 12 or 13 joins a gang and gives his life for it," Poveda said in an interview for the Salvadoran online daily El Faro. Already broadcast in Spain, Mexico, Argentina, Germany and Hungary, La Vida Loca has never been screened in El Salvador.


Also in this section:
Editorials: Prosecuting corruption; Condos and hotels; and Ted Kennedy
Reporters Without Borders, Tribute to slain documentary maker Christian Poveda
Jackson, Where to hold Panama City's Carnival
Bernal, An intrusion into the private sphere
Endara, The company that got the contract for the new locks
Committee to Protect Journalists, Broadcasters attacked in Honduras
Wood, Carbon controversies in Costa Rica
Boscov-Ellen, Brazil's attempts to deal with Rio's slums
Matsunaga, Brazil gains and Colombia doesn't at UNASUR summit
Sanchez, Embraer and Brazil's armaments industry
Amnesty International, Arrest warrants for dozens of Pinochet dictatorship agents
Zibechi, Chile's salmon farms and the privatization of the sea
Green Forum, Overfishing and extinction
Weisbrot, The American people are ahead of their government on US foreign policy
Human Rights Watch, Israel tries to discredit Gaza report with false allegations
Barrow, The nationalization of Belize Telemedia Ltd
Leis, Small screen but big challenge
Sirias, The seldom-mentioned Somoza
Letters to the editor

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