Journalist shot dead in southern Honduras
The sharp critic of the govt gets shot while on foot
TEGUCIGALPA:
A Honduran reporter critical of the government was shot dead in the south of the Central American country, police and rights groups said on Sunday.
Police in Nacaome, 100 kilometers (62 miles) south of the capital Tegucigalpa, said Leonardo Gabriel Hernandez, 54, was shot and wounded in the street and taken to a clinic, where he died.
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Hernandez - a Valle TV reporter whom a witness said was on foot when met by someone who opened fire - was a sharp critic of Honduras government.
The non-governmental Committee for Free Expression (C-Libre) said Hernandez was the director and presenter of the "El Pueblo Habla" ("The People Speak") program.
Spokesperson for the National Commissioner of Human Rights, Julio Velasquez, said 77 journalists, broadcasters, owners and employees of media have been murdered in Honduras since 2001.
Ninety-two percent of the crimes go unpunished and are not investigated, he said.
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Honduras and its neighbors, El Salvador and Guatemala, form the "Northern Triangle", the world's most violent region outside of a conflict zone.
A 2018 Inter-American Development Bank study reported the country's second largest city, San Pedro Sula, has a murder rate of more than 80 per 100,000 inhabitants - between 10 and 20 times greater than the world average.
A Honduran reporter critical of the government was shot dead in the south of the Central American country, police and rights groups said on Sunday.
Police in Nacaome, 100 kilometers (62 miles) south of the capital Tegucigalpa, said Leonardo Gabriel Hernandez, 54, was shot and wounded in the street and taken to a clinic, where he died.
Mexico journalist slain, 3rd this year
Hernandez - a Valle TV reporter whom a witness said was on foot when met by someone who opened fire - was a sharp critic of Honduras government.
The non-governmental Committee for Free Expression (C-Libre) said Hernandez was the director and presenter of the "El Pueblo Habla" ("The People Speak") program.
Spokesperson for the National Commissioner of Human Rights, Julio Velasquez, said 77 journalists, broadcasters, owners and employees of media have been murdered in Honduras since 2001.
Ninety-two percent of the crimes go unpunished and are not investigated, he said.
Indian journalist receives death threats for saving Kashmiri students
Honduras and its neighbors, El Salvador and Guatemala, form the "Northern Triangle", the world's most violent region outside of a conflict zone.
A 2018 Inter-American Development Bank study reported the country's second largest city, San Pedro Sula, has a murder rate of more than 80 per 100,000 inhabitants - between 10 and 20 times greater than the world average.