How Duque’s press chief became Colombia’s censor

Juan Pablo Bieri (Image: President's Office)

Juan Pablo Bieri’s job was to keep pesky journalists away from Ivan Duque, until the protege of former President Alvaro Uribe became president and appointed Bieri the public television chief.

Six month later, Bieri is attacking the country’s press freedom foundation for exposing how the director of RTVC ordered to take down a popular television program because the host had criticized the Duque administration’s controversial, but successful attempts to clamp down on press freedom on public television.


Duque seeks to shut down Colombia’s most critical public TV network: Journalists and lawmakers


Santiago Rivas (Image: Twitter)

The League Against Silence, an initiative of press freedom foundation FLIP to counter censorship, released audio in which the public television chief ordered to take television program “Los Puros Criollos,” off the air because host Santiago Rivas had dared to “bite the hand that feeds him.”

“La Pulla,” a renowned vlog of newspaper El Espectador, released the audio and exposed how Bieri had not just censored the journalist, but also lied to the public about his attempts to avenge journalists who criticize the government.

RTVC director Juan Pablo Bieri
La Pulla host Maria Paulina Baena

Bieri was so annoyed by Rivas’ criticism on the law that all but destroyed the journalistic independence of the country’s renowned public television channels that he ordered to cancel the show on the same day that Rivas appeared on “La Pulla” to warn about the negative consequences of Duque’s proposal that is now public policy.

Bieri initially denied that the decision to take down “Los Puros Criollos” was a blatant attempt to censor public television journalists who criticized Colombia’s hard-right president, but the audio revealed on Wednesday he had not just ordered the censoring of journalists, but also lied to the public.

Juan Pablo Bieri

After being caught on tape explicitly ordering to sack Rivas, Bieri counterattacked by releasing the email address of the director of the FLIP, Pedro Vaca, public and accusing him of criminal activity.

According to Bieri, the FLIP had violated his right to privacy for recording him while he was at work as a public official.

Rivas said he was “sad and perplexed” about Bieri’s blatant attempts to take him off the air.

Human Rights Watch director Jose Miguel Vivanco asked the president to repudiate his former press chief’s censorship and demand his resignation.

Duque did not respond to Vivanco’s request or the latest wave of criticism discrediting Colombia’s unpopular president.


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