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Press freedom advocates such as the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists believe that restrictions on the press in Ecuador will soon resemble those in Venezuela. The press committee's Americas director, Carlos Lauria, said that while other popularly elected leftist-run governments have also shown intolerance, Ecuador and Venezuela are most "notorious" in "suffocating the institutions of democracy, including the press, in an attempt to control the flow of information and suppress dissent." So far this year, the Correa government has shut down 20 TV and radio stations, most of them small and provincial, for alleged administrative transgressions. Eight were opposition stations. Correa has repeatedly accused Ricaurte of working for the American government. While his foundation gets 15 percent of its funding from the U.S. Agency for International Development, it also receives funding from donors including the U.N. agency UNESCO, the nongovernmental Panamerican Development Foundation and the Andean Community of Nations trade grouping. Ricaurte said he gets continual threats via email and sarcastic comments posted on his website demanding a share of his alleged "million-dollar" U.S. Embassy payments. Those threats led to fears of violence against him in June while he was waiting for a cab in Quito and was pushed violently from behind by a man who screamed: "U.S. Embassy informant! Traitor!" By the time he recovered his balance and reached for his cellphone to take a photograph, the man was gone. Ricaurte said the special broadcasts Correa uses to denounce him are abusive. Other Latin American leftist leaders, including Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, have employed such broadcasts during crises. President Cristina Fernandez of Argentina uses them several times every week. Ricaurte criticized Correa' successful criminal libel suit last year against the main opposition newspaper, El Universo, and three of its top journalists, including columnist Emilio Palacio, who repeatedly called him a dictator. Correa later forgave the paper the $42 million damages award and pardoned the journalists, but he'd made his point. Palacio was granted U.S. political asylum last week. Now, a proposed Radio and Television Law would partition Ecuador's radio and TV broadcast spectrum into three: one-third for the state, one-third for "community media" and one-third for private companies. Venezuela already has such an arrangement, with the "community media" almost exclusively pro-government. Argentina's Fernandez hasn't gone that far. But a friendly Congress did enact a law designed to break up media monopolies, and journalists for Argentina's opposition media have been roughed up by pro-government demonstrators. "Freedom of expression is very much threatened and as time goes on it is deteriorating even more rapidly," Ricaurte said.
[Associated
Press;
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