US reverses decision on visa denial to Colombian journalist

The US State Department has reversed its decision to deny a visa to a leading Colombian journalist whose reporting has been highly critical of the country's US-allied president. Morris, his wife and their two children can now travel to Harvard for a yearlong Nieman Foundation fellowship for mid-career journalists.

"Happy, happy! This was terrible," a relieved Hollman Morris, an independent TV producer and reporter, told the Associated Press after he and his family picked up their visas at the US Embassy on Tuesday.

Some details: [Link]

A US consular officer in Bogota told the journalist last month he was ruled permanently ineligible for a visa under the "terrorist activities" clause of the USA Patriot Act. Morris said he was not given an explanation for the denial or the reversal. Nor was Nieman curator Robert Giles. US Embassy spokeswoman Ana Duque-Higgins said Tuesday she could not discuss the issue because of privacy rules.

Morris expressed deep gratitude for the support he received from fellow journalists at home and abroad, lawmakers in the US Congress and organizations including Human Rights Watch, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), the InterAmerican Press Association (IAPA) and the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), who decried the visa denial as an attack on free speech. Some said it put Morris' life in danger.

Morris blamed a smear campaign by allies of outgoing President Alvaro Uribe, who had accused him of being "an accomplice of terrorism." That effort "was about trying to silence a journalist who his entire career has sought to bring attention to the victims, to the invisible," he said.

Morris, who produces the TV news show "Contravia," has reported on ties between illegal far-right militias and allies of Uribe, Washington's closest ally in Latin America. The 41-year-old Morris, one of 12 foreign journalists admitted to the Nieman program for the 2010-2011 academic year, is among the most controversial chroniclers of Colombia's long-running conflict.

 
 
Date Posted: 28 July 2010 Last Modified: 28 July 2010