Colombia’s congress approves media bans

Colombia’s House of Representatives on Monday approved legislation that allows government officials to request the shut-down of news media that report on them.

The controversial rider was part of an “anti-corruption” bill that was sponsored by coalition party Radical Change and has yet to be approved by the Senate.

The vote triggered a storm of protest of free speech advocates who claimed that the bill sought to censor journalists who report on government corruption.

In response to the blowback, Congress amended the article, which initially allowed government official to request an arraignment judge to jail critics charged with slander or defamation.

Proposed article 221A of Colombia’s criminal code

Despite the change, press freedom organization FLIP said that the pending amendment of the criminal code introduced “a decidedly backwards norm against the freedom of the press, the freedom of expression and the right to information of Colombians.”

FLIP

The Colombian branch of Transparency International said that the possible approval of the bill in the senate “would be a setback for the fight against corruption” as it “generates disincentives to reporting and puts at risk the freedom of expression.”

Electoral observers joined the free speech advocates and rejected the proposed amendment of the criminal code that “restricts the oversight of citizens.”

Electoral Observation Mission

The opposition said it would challenge the legislation before the Constitutional Court if the Senate votes to uphold the bill as passed by the lower chamber.

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