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Oaxaca Journalist Covering Teacher's Strike Shot Dead

  • Protesters in Juchitan set fire to buses as a barricade against incoming police on Canal 33.

    Protesters in Juchitan set fire to buses as a barricade against incoming police on Canal 33. | Photo: Facebook / Salina Cruz Oaxaca

Published 20 June 2016
Opinion

Teachers strikes in Oaxaca have escalated as more armed police mobilize to the south, ending with the death of eight civilians on Sunday.

A journalist in Oaxaca was shot dead Sunday afternoon after covering the teacher’s blockade of a main highway.

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Eligio Ramos Zarate, reporter at El Sur that went by the pseudonym Guillermo Parie, was shot in the neck by two motorcyclists who are still unidentified as he was photographing the holdup of a convenient store nearby.

Raul Cano Lopez, brother of the director of Hechos, another newspaper in Juchitan, Oaxaca, was also killed in gunfire. His brother said that he was just sitting at the bus stop. One unidentified person was injured.

The state agency for investigations said it has not confirmed any motive, but that Ramos Zarate had connections to someone who “supposedly committed illegal acts,” reported El Proceso.

The state of Oaxaca has been under fire during escalating strikes by the CNTE teachers union against neoliberal education reforms.

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The blockade of Canal 33 of a major highway that began last week was met with 900 police on Friday. Teachers called for the release of two of their union leaders, who were detained under what they call bogus claims.

At least eight civilians, according to CNTE’s latest count, were killed on Sunday in Nochixtlan, Oaxaca after clashes between strikers and police grew violent.

Violence against journalists in Mexico is among the worst in the world, with a reporter attacked every 22 hours, according to a new report. Attacks rose by 22 percent last year.

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