martes, 7 de septiembre de 2010

Court of Venezuela bans publishing photos of deaths, blood and guns, in newspapers



On August 17, 2010, The National Journal decided to publish an article about "15 million illegal firearms in the hands of country's civilian population.” This article is accompanied by a picture showing a morgue in Caracas as an example of the morgues across the country, which are packed with dead bodies waiting to be claimed by relatives.

The National Journal made this article in protest against the daily uncertainty that invaded Venezuela, and to show to the world that Venezuela is a country with 20,000 murders in the year 2009.

The published image clearly showed a crowded morgue with dead bodies, without any control.

This sparked the ire of Chavez, and through a court, he forbid publishing images, information and advertising showing content of any blood, guns, messages of terror and/or physical aggression.
By this measure, once again, the Communist Chávez government imposed censorship to media that has an opposition posture.The opposition media in Venezuela is working peacefully to show the reality of violence, persecution and oppression that Venezuelans live day by day, in every corner, in every city, in every state in the territory of Venezuela.

In Venezuela there are more deaths than in the war in Iraq. Every day Venezuelans endure a civil war set up by Chavez and his supporters The Chavistas.

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