US - RSF joins letter denouncing attempt to deport Mexican journalist

Reporters Without Borders (RSF) joined multiple press freedom groups in the following letter today denouncing attempts to deport Mexican journalist Emilio Gutierrez Soto from the United States.

The National Press Club, its Journalism Institute and other advocates for press freedom and immigration justice urge U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to suspend efforts to deport Emilio Gutierrez, a winner of the club’s Press Freedom Award.


Late on Friday, an immigration judge in El Paso, Texas, refused to stay the deportation of Gutierrez from the United States — where and his son fled after his investigative reporting led to threats against himself and his family. Gutierrez requested asylum in the United States; it took eight years for him to get a hearing, which took place last year.


“Gutierrez fled his country because his reporting jeopardized him and his family and then faced years of bureaucratic indifference before now being threatened with removal,” said NPC President Jeff Ballou. “He deserves better from a country that has enshrined protections for the press in the First Amendment of its Constitution.”


Gutierrez has been in the midst of an appeal process over his asylum case. On Thursday Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials summoned him for a meeting. They told his lawyer they wanted to deport him that day. This meeting took place exactly six weeks after he appeared at the National Press Club to accept a Freedom of the Press award, one of the club’s highest honors, on behalf of his country’s beleaguered press corps.


At the NPC’s request, Gutierrez represented all of his Mexican colleagues, as an exemplar of their tenacity and courage as reporters are killed, kidnapped and forced into hiding in retaliation for their reporting on drug cartels and government corruption.


He and his Mexican associates "find ourselves immersed in a great darkness,” Gutierrez said through a translator.


“Our hope is that U.S. officials will provide a beacon in that darkness, in keeping with the country’s long tradition of advancing press freedom, by granting Gutierrez the asylum he has requested in the United States,” said Barbara Cochran, president of the board for the non-profit National Press Club Journalism Institute. “Sending him back to a country that is the most dangerous in the western hemisphere for journalists could amount to a death sentence.”


The National Press Club, the National Press Club Journalism Institute and the undersigned organizations appeal to the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Justice to reconsider this deportation order. We also ask the Trump administration and all members of Congress to let the Department know that this case not only puts an individual reporter in danger, but also could have a chilling effect on truth-telling everywhere.


Jeff Ballou, president

The National Press Club


Barbara Cochran, board president

NPC Journalism Institute


Sandy Johnson, president and COO

National Press Foundation


Margaux Ewen, Advocacy and Communications Director

Reporters Without Borders, North America


Dan Shelley, executive director

Radio Television Digital News Association


Bruce Brown, executive director

Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press


Suzanne Nossel, executive director

PEN America


Joshua Hatch, president

Online News Association


John Donnelly, president

Military Reporters and Editors


Sarah Glover, president

National Association of Black Journalists


Yvonne Leow, national president

Asian American Journalists Association


Melissa Lytle, president

National Press Photographers Association


Mark Hamrick, president

Society of American Business Editors and Writers


Alberto B. Mendoza, executive director

National Association of Hispanic Journalists


Beau Willimon, president

Writers Guild of America East

Published on
Updated on 18.11.2017