New UN reports finds Mexico programme to protect journalists, activists is underfunded and can’t guarantee safety.

A Mexican government programme to protect journalists and activists is underfunded and cannot guarantee safety amid widespread impunity and threats, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights in Mexico said on Monday.

At least 11 reporters and 13 human rights activists have been killed so far this year in the country, according to the UN group. Other tallies put the total number at least 12 journalists. That nearly exceeds last year’s tallies, and suggests death tolls could reach record levels in 2019.

Nevith Condes Jaramillo was the latest reporter found dead in Mexico. The state prosecutor said on Saturday that he died as result of being stabbed several times.

Jaramillo, 42, also went by the name Nevith N. He ran the local news site El Observatorio del Sur.

Jan Jarab, head of the OHCHR here, said Mexico’s “political commitment” to protecting journalists and activists had proven to be a challenge on various levels.

190825090931251

The concern raises questions about how much President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador sees the issue as a priority. Mexico’s total murder tally has also continued rising, underlining the scale of the task he faces.

Very few murder cases result in convictions, or even arrests. More than half of the suspects identified by the programme were public officials.

“Without the fight against impunity, there won’t be a cease of fire against journalists here in Mexico,” Ana Ruelas, Article 19, a group promoting press freedom, told Al Jazeera.

Journalists hold up photos of slain journalists during a protest to call attention to the killings of journalists in Mexico [File: Marco Ugarte/AP Photo]

Rights groups say that officials who threaten journalists and activists are often seeking to hide corruption and protect their personal interests.

“Mexico lacks sufficient recognition for the work of human rights defenders and journalists,” Jarab told a news conference where he presented a 410-page OHCHR report, which argues impunity in Mexico was a key reason to bolster the programme.

“Authorities need to publicly condemn all aggressions,” he said.

190803144957086

‘Situation has only gotten worse’

The government’s Protection Mechanism for Human Rights Defenders and Journalists – which provides resources such as panic buttons, surveillance systems and bodyguards – currently serves 903 people, up from 48 at its launch five years ago.

However, budgets and staffing have not kept pace, and the programme could comprise more than 3,400 people by the end of Lopez Obrador’s six-year term in 2024, Jarab said.

“The growth we’ve had in recent years could accelerate if things don’t change,” he added. “The mechanism needs strengthening, it needs to have sufficient staffing to protect the beneficiaries and take preventative actions.”

Staffing has stagnated since 2014, while this year’s budget is less than what was spent in 2017 and 2018, the report said.

The government has not yet responded to an April request to increase the budget.

190503213305548

Faced with scant resources, the programme cannot guarantee efficient and proper functioning, the report said. For example, staff often suffer delays in reacting to threats because they cannot access work email outside of the office, or have difficulty navigating the internet on government computers.

A company monitoring panic button alerts cannot quickly evaluate and react to new risks, including emergencies, the report says.

Four reporters were killed this month alone in Mexico, which Reporters Without Borders has called the most dangerous country for journalists in the Western Hemisphere.

Jan Albert Hootsen, the Mexico representative for the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) said that over the last few years, “the situation has only gotten worse”.

“We’re waiting on a response from the federal government, which unfortunately has not materialised so far,” he told Al Jazeera.