Indian media grapples with AI ethics in newsrooms Media warn Democratic bill could chill press freedom Kashmiri journalist Irfan Mehraj marks 1,000 days jailed South Korea passes tougher penalties for false media reports Israel extends foreign media restriction law to 2027 CPJ urges probe into attacks on Bangladesh media China bans obscene content sharing on private messaging Indonesian journalists urge fair policies to support media RSF warns over 500 journalists will spend holidays in prison Assaults on journalists in U.S. surge during 2025 protests Indian media grapples with AI ethics in newsrooms Media warn Democratic bill could chill press freedom Kashmiri journalist Irfan Mehraj marks 1,000 days jailed South Korea passes tougher penalties for false media reports Israel extends foreign media restriction law to 2027 CPJ urges probe into attacks on Bangladesh media China bans obscene content sharing on private messaging Indonesian journalists urge fair policies to support media RSF warns over 500 journalists will spend holidays in prison Assaults on journalists in U.S. surge during 2025 protests
Logo
Janu
Where media reporting began

Mexican reporter Julio Valdivia found beheaded in Veracruz state

 JournalismPakistan.com |  Published 5 years ago

Join our WhatsApp channel

Mexican reporter Julio Valdivia found beheaded in Veracruz state

MEXICO CITY–Mexican authorities must immediately undertake a thorough and credible investigation into the killing of journalist Julio Valdivia and bring the perpetrators to justice, the Committee to Protect Journalists said on Friday.

The body of Valdivia, a reporter for the local El Mundo newspaper, was found in the municipality of Tezonapa, in the eastern Mexican state of Veracruz, according to news reports.

Valdivia’s body, which had been beheaded, was found near train tracks in the town of Motzorongo at about 2:30 p.m., according to one of the journalist’s colleagues who spoke to CPJ on the condition of anonymity, because they were not authorized by the newspaper to speak on the matter.

The Veracruz state prosecutor’s office had not yet issued an offMotzorongoicial statement about the case on its website or social media accounts as of today, but investigators told Animal Político, a Mexico City news website, that they had ruled out an accident.

CPJ called the prosecutor’s office several times, but no one answered. During a press conference today in Mexico City, President Andrés Manuel López Obrador urged authorities to investigate the case, according to news reports.

“The shockingly brutal killing of Julio Valdivia only strengthens Veracruz’s status as not just the most violent state for journalists in Mexico, but as the deadliest region for journalists in all of the Americas,” said Jan-Albert Hootsen, CPJ’s Mexico representative. “Federal and state authorities cannot stand idly by and continue to allow Veracruz’s vicious cycle of impunity and violence against in the press.”

Yesterday, Valdivia told the colleague who spoke with CPJ that he was leaving his residence on a motorcycle provided to him by the newspaper to report on a story in Tezonapa, but did not specify the subject of the story.

The news reports on Valdivia’s killing said the reporter had received death threats recently but did not provide more details. Valdivia’s colleague told CPJ that other staffers at the paper told him that Valdivia had received threats, but said he was unaware of the details.

Valdivia, 41, joined El Mundo in 2014 and was the regional correspondent for the newspaper in Tezonapa, covering a broad range of issues, his colleague said, adding that Valdivia’s most recent reporting was heavily focused on crime and security.

“The border region between Veracruz and Oaxaca is a very complicated place to report on,” the colleague told CPJ. “There are gangs involved in drug trafficking and oil theft and a lot of people have been killed there recently.”

Tezonapa has seen a significant spike in deadly violence this year, mostly related to clashes between criminal gangs, which have resulted in the deaths of several local sugar cane farmers, according to news reports.

El Mundo does not include bylines for stories that could risk the correspondent’s safety, Valdivia’s colleague said. The colleague referred CPJ to recent stories about Tezonapa, including articles about police raids in bars and the disappearance of a young man, which he said were likely written by Valdivia.

On September 8, El Mundo’s Facebook page posted a report with video images credited to Valdivia about a shootout in Cosolapa, a town near Tezonapa in Veracruz’s neighboring state of Oaxaca.

Several telephone calls by CPJ to reach the editors of El Mundo for comment remained unanswered.

In a statement sent to CPJ via WhatsApp message, the State Commission for Attention to and Protection of Journalists, an autonomous Veracruz government agency, said that it had not been made aware of any threats against Valdivia’s life. The Federal Mechanism for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders and Journalists, which operates under the auspices of the federal Interior Secretariat in Mexico City, condemned the killing in a statement released earlier today, adding that Valdivia was not enrolled in a federal protection program for reporters.

Mexico is the most dangerous country for journalists in the Western Hemisphere. At least three journalists have been murdered in the country in 2020 in direct relation to their work, according to research by CPJ, which is investigating a fourth killing to ascertain the motive. On March 30 of this year, journalist Maria Elena Ferral was murdered in Veracruz.—A CPJ News Alert/Photo: AFP

 

Read Next

Newsroom
Indian media grapples with AI ethics in newsrooms

Indian media grapples with AI ethics in newsrooms

 December 24, 2025 Indian media organizations are debating ethical rules for artificial intelligence as newsrooms adopt AI tools, raising concerns over accuracy, accountability, and the future role of journalists.


Media warn Democratic bill could chill press freedom

Media warn Democratic bill could chill press freedom

 December 24, 2025 Media groups warn that a Democratic-backed bill could expand defamation liability, raising concerns over press freedom, investigative reporting, and potential chilling effects across U.S. newsrooms.


Kashmiri journalist Irfan Mehraj marks 1,000 days jailed

Kashmiri journalist Irfan Mehraj marks 1,000 days jailed

 December 24, 2025 Kashmiri journalist Irfan Meraj has spent over 1,000 days in detention by Indian authorities in Kashmir, renewing concerns over press freedom and legal pressure on independent media.


South Korea passes tougher penalties for false media reports

South Korea passes tougher penalties for false media reports

 December 24, 2025 South Korea’s parliament passed a law imposing tougher penalties on the media for false information, raising concerns from journalists over press freedom and investigative reporting.


Israel extends foreign media restriction law to 2027

Israel extends foreign media restriction law to 2027

 December 24, 2025 Israel’s Knesset has extended emergency legislation allowing limits on foreign media outlets until 2027, prompting renewed concern from press freedom groups over long-term impacts on reporting.


Popular Stories