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Mexican journalist Lourdes Maldonado López, who feared for her life, killed in Tijuana

By Karol Suarez and David von Blohn, CNN

Journalist Lourdes Maldonado López was killed on Sunday in northern Mexico’s border city of Tijuana, marking the third killing of a journalist in the country in two weeks.

López was shot to death inside a car in Tijuana’s Santa Fe neighborhood, according to a Sunday statement from the Baja California Attorney General Office.

Local law enforcement first received a report on Sunday at 7 p.m. local time and found López dead upon arrival, it said.

An investigation is underway.

López covered corruption and politics, and had been the victim of previous attacks for her work, according to the human rights organization, Article 19, of which López was a member.

In March 2019, López told Mexico’s President Andrés Manuel López Obrador in his daily press briefing that she feared for her life and asked for his “support, help and labor justice.”

López was speaking about a labour dispute she had with Jaime Bonilla, who owns the PSN media outlet where López had previously worked. López had sued the company for unfair dismissal. Bonilla was sworn in as governor of Baja California in November 2019 after running a successful campaign as a candidate of López Obrador’s ruling Morena party.

Just days before she was killed, she won the lawsuit.

CNN has reached out to Bonilla and PSN for comment.

In an interview with the radio station Radio Formula that Bonilla posted to his Twitter account on Monday, he said that while he hadn’t seen Lopez for many years, he had “always” had a “good relationship” with her.

Bonilla said that he didn’t know why Lopez had asked the president for protection, saying “there was never a threat, not even an argument with her.”

“Every time something happens to journalists, it hurts,” Bonilla said, also offering his condolences to Lopez’s family.

The Committee to Protect Journalists said in a tweet it is “shocked” by López’s killing and called on authorities to “thoroughly and transparently investigate the attack.”

‘A spiral of violence’

Maldonado’s killing follows that of freelance photojournalist Alfonso Margarito Martínez Esquivel on January 17 in Tijuana, and that of Jose Luis Gamboa — a journalist who founded and edited the Inforegio news website and co-founded and edited the news website La Noticia — on January 10 in Veracruz state.

The Baja California Attorney General’s Office told CNN that Esquivel’s death occurred outside his home after he suffered a gunshot to the head.

Esquivel, who was 49, covered crime scene and security issues in Tijuana for local and international media outlets.

The Baja California State Human Rights Commission has called on authorities to investigate the circumstances of his death.

Miguel Mora, a representative for the commission said that “it’s urgent to carry out an expedited process of this case since any attack on journalists constitutes an attack on freedom of expression and the right of society to be informed.”

Mexico continues to be one of the world’s deadliest countries for journalists, according to Reporters Without Borders (RSF).

“Despite some limited recent progress, it [Mexico] is sinking ever deeper into a spiral of violence and impunity,” according to RSF.

“Collusion between officials and organised crime poses a grave threat to journalists’ safety and cripples the judicial system at all levels. Journalists who cover sensitive political stories or crime, especially at the local level, are warned, threatened and then often gunned down in cold blood. Others are abducted and never seen again, or they flee abroad as the only way to ensure their survival,” RSF said.

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CNN’s Kara Fox contributed reporting.

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