CARACAS, (Reuters) – A Venezuelan court has ordered two opposition newspapers not to print violent images and asked the rest to follow suit, in a move that it said was to protect children but which critics denounced as censorship.
The ruling followed a scandal over the publication of a photograph of corpses piled at a morgue in Caracas, which the government says was part of campaign against President Hugo Chavez’s Socialist Party ahead of Sept. 26 legislative polls.
The picture was splashed on the front page of El Nacional newspaper last Friday under a headline about growing insecurity in the South American country. It was reprinted by another newspaper, Tal Cual, on Monday.
The city morgue receives many people killed by violence or in traffic accidents. The newspapers used the image to show the institution was overwhelmed by the number of bodies.
Yesterday, El Nacional printed a front page without photos, emblazoned with the word “Censored.”
“(The print media) should abstain from publishing violent, bloody or grotesque images, whether of crime or not, that in one way or another threaten the moral and psychological state of children,” the 12th Tribunal of Caracas said in the ruling late on Tuesday.
The director of El Nacional, Miguel Henrique Otero, has defended his paper’s decision to publish the image, which it says was taken by one of its photographers last December.
He told CNN the government had adopted “a very aggressive position because the picture had a very big political impact given the disproportionate growth of crime” in Venezuela.
“The editorial aim of the photo was to shock people so that in some way they react to the situation, since the government does nothing,” Otero said.