200 Days of Censorship on Brazil’s Leading Newspaper

Estadão siteBrazilian daily O Estado de S. Paulo and its website Estadão are approaching the 200th day of a court order banning them from publishing any information about legal matters involving businessman Fernando Sarney, the son of former President José Sarney, who is now president of the senate.

Their first six months of censorship under the July 31 order, which has set a dangerous press precedent for press freedom, was completed on February 1st. A black stripe on the site this Thursday tells that the paper has been under censorship for 194 days.

The federal supreme court took only three months to uphold the ban although it was the same supreme court which, on April 30 overturned a Draconian 1967 press law inherited from the 1964-85 military dictatorship. Its contradictory decision has been a disappointment for the news media.

It was as if a new censorship mechanism had to be introduced as soon as the hangover from the repressive past had been eliminated. O Estado de S. Paulo is the direct victim of this U-turn, but all the Brazilian media are likely to feel its effect.

What is there to stop other plaintiffs from obtaining bans on media coverage of their activities even if the information is of public interest? The threat will continue as long as the censorship imposed on O Estado de São Paulo has not been lifted and repudiated.

Both the form and substance of the order can be challenged:

– The censorship was imposed on O Estado de São Paulo for a different reason from the one originally cited by Sarney. The ban concerns a questionable real estate operation in which he is involved but he launched his action against the newspaper after it published details of phone tapping by the federal police concerning an unrelated matter.

– A week after the supreme court’s December 10 decision to uphold the ban, Sarney withdrew his action against O Estado de S. Paulo citing a desire not to endanger press freedom. In the absence of a plaintiff, there were no longer any grounds for censorship. Nonetheless, what the supreme court called the need to “protect dignity and honor” has taken precedence over the Brazilian public’s right to be informed.

– Finally, how is it possible to justify the fact that one news organization, and one alone, is forbidden to report facts which other news organizations are able to report and which are known to the public? The supreme court is supposed to interpret the law but it is hard not to suspect a politically-motivated decision.

Created in 1985 Reporters Without Borders fights for press freedom all over the world. www.rsf.org

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil Is the Star of 2009 Franchise Expo Paris

Brazil will get special treatment from the Franchise Expo Paris, the major international event ...

Gunmen Kill One Indian and Hurt Four Others In Land Dispute in Brazil

A Guarani Indian was shot dead early on Sunday morning, June 26, by heavily ...

Brazil Hopeful Global Crisis Will Strengthen the Country’s Beef Industry

Saudi Arabia, Algeria, Egypt and Libya once again stand out among the ten main ...

Brazil and Turkey As Seen Through IMF Eyes

The First Deputy Managing Director of the IMF, Anne O. Krueger, talks about how ...

Brazilian Belita Koiller Gets UNESCO Prize for Science

Brazilian physicist, Belita Koiller, received, in Paris, France, one of the five prizes awarded ...

Brazil Earmarks US$ 420,000 for Drug Users’ Syringe Exchange

This week, Brazil’s Ministry of Health released norms on what is known as harm ...

For Greenpeace Brazil’s Transgenic Soybeans Have No Scientific Basis

Despite the forecast of a harvest including 25 million tons of transgenic soybeans, the ...

Brazil Teaches Lebanon to Use Waste to Build Houses and Roads

Brazil is going to help Lebanon recycle waste to be used in the construction ...

UFRJ, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Brazil Needs a Little Less Astuteness and a Little More Civic Engagement

After declaring Brazil’s Independence, the Empire’s leaders decided to educate the children of the ...

Monetary Easing in US Brings Record Day to Brazil’s Market

Latin American stocks powered higher, led by Brazilian shares, on indications the U.S. Federal ...