Carlos Flores Borja, the manager of Amazonian radio station La Voz de Bagua, travelled all the way to Lima last week because he had been given an appointment with transport and communications minister Enrique Cornejo on August 11 to discuss the reopening of the station, which the government closed 14 months ago. But in the end, Flores was received by deputy minister Jorge Cuba Hidalgo, who told him that the station will remain closed despite the promise that President Alan García gave last May to intercede on its behalf.
A ministerial order stripped La Voz de Bagua of its licence on June 8, 2009 although it had been broadcasting legally since March 13, 2007 on a frequency it had been allocated for a 10-year period. The reason given by the ministry was the station's failure to complete required paperwork. But the real reason was its alleged support for an uprising by indigenous groups in Yurimaguas that led to clashes in which around 30 people had died at the start of the month.
Like other local and national media, the station interviewed members of the indigenous groups while they were holding a dozen policemen hostage. Interior minister Mercedes Cabanillas reacted at the time by publicly threatening the station with closure. Paris-based press freedom group Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) wrote to the transport and communications ministry later that month about the case but never received a reply.
As well as objecting to the government's discrimination against La Voz de Bagua, RSF is also protesting against last week's humiliating treatment of its manager. "Why did the ministry of transport and communications get Flores to travel all the way to Lima by raising false hopes?" it asked.
"And why is the government contradicting itself? Why is the president saying one thing and the deputy minister something completely different? The best way to ensure that this regrettable episode is forgotten would be to allow La Voz de Bagua to resume broadcasting."