Current:Home > MarketsJailed Guatemalan journalist to AP: ‘I can defend myself, because I am innocent’ -AssetLink
Jailed Guatemalan journalist to AP: ‘I can defend myself, because I am innocent’
View
Date:2025-04-15 00:29:15
GUATEMALA CITY (AP) — José Rubén Zamora has spent nearly two years locked in a dark 16- by 13-foot cell in a Guatemalan prison, allowed only one hour a day in the sunlight.
The journalist’s money laundering conviction was tossed out, and last week a judge finally ordered his conditional release to await a new trial. But the 67-year-old founder of the newspaper El Periodico never made it out. Two more cases against him include detention orders.
In a jail house interview Tuesday, Zamora told The Associated Press that he had heard he would be arrested in July 2022 a week before agents came for him. But, he said, “it never crossed my mind to flee. I have to face justice because I can defend myself, because I am innocent.”
International press freedom organizations have labeled Zamora’s arrest and detention a political prosecution. Zamora concurs. He contends his legal problems were engineered by former President Alejandro Giammattei, who appeared many times in the pages of El Periodico accused of corruption.
Zamora said his treatment has improved somewhat since President Bernardo Arévalo took office in January, but the bar was low.
His first day in prison in July 2022, he had only a towel his wife had given him, which he used to cover the bare mattress where he sleeps. He went two weeks without talking to another prisoner. His only outside contact was with his lawyers, a changing cast of more than 10, two of whom were eventually also charged with obstructing justice.
Things always got worse for him before a hearing.
“There was one day when the head of the prison came to take me out of the cell every time I bathed or went to the bathroom, he wanted to search me,” Zamora said.
One night before a hearing, workers began installing bars near his cell starting at 6 p.m. and going to 5 a.m., he said.
The long hours without daylight, the isolation and being awakened several times a night by guards amount to psychological torture, Zamora said.
“Listen to how it sounds when it closes,” Zamora said of his steel cell door. “Imagine that six times a night.”
Zamora constantly brings up details of his cases. The only one to earn him a sentence – later thrown out – was for money laundering. Zamora explained that a well-known painter friend of his had donated a painting, which he then sold to pay the newspaper’s debts.
He believes his newspaper’s critical reporting on Giammattei’s administration led to the prosecutions by Attorney General Consuelo Porras, who Giammattei put up for a second term before leaving office.
The other cases revolve around alleged obstruction of justice and falsifying documents.
There are no trial dates for any of the cases.
“That case just like this one is staged,” Zamora said. “There’s nothing supporting it. It will collapse for them the same way.
veryGood! (35)
Related
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- Q&A: Catherine Coleman Flowers Talks COP28, Rural Alabama, and the Path Toward a ‘Just Transition’
- Busy Philipps' 15-Year-Old Birdie Has Terrifying Seizure at School in Sweden
- Anxiety and resignation in Argentina after Milei’s economic shock measures
- Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
- Experts at odds over result of UN climate talks in Dubai; ‘Historic,’ ‘pipsqueak’ or something else?
- Broken wings: Complaints about U.S. airlines soared again this year
- Top EU official lauds Italy-Albania migration deal but a court and a rights commissioner have doubts
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Pope, once a victim of AI-generated imagery, calls for treaty to regulate artificial intelligence
Ranking
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- Bernie Sanders: We can't allow the food and beverage industry to destroy our kids' health
- Palestinians blame U.S. as Israel-Hamas war takes a soaring toll on civilians in the Gaza Strip
- Man charged with murder of Detroit synagogue leader Samantha Woll
- Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
- Dismayed by Moscow’s war, Russian volunteers are joining Ukrainian ranks to fight Putin’s troops
- Amazon won’t have to pay hundreds of millions in back taxes after winning EU case
- 'Shameless': Reporters Without Borders rebukes X for claiming to support it
Recommendation
The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
Endangered whale filmed swimming with beachgoers dies after stranding on sandbar
The 'physics' behind potential interest rate cuts
Turkish minister says Somalia president’s son will return to face trial over fatal highway crash
Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
China’s economy is forecast to slow sharply in 2024, the World Bank says, calling recovery ‘fragile’
Zelenskyy makes first visit to US military headquarters in Germany, voices optimism about US aid
In 'Asgard's Wrath 2,' VR gaming reaches a new God mode