Back in August, I wrote in this space about the killing
of Patrícia Acioli, a judge who was trying to put down a cabal of honest cops.
On Monday, the 23rd of April, it was
the turn of this man…
journalist Décio Sá.
Here’s the story:
Décio worked as a political reporter in the northeastern
State of Maranhão, a place long-famed for clientelism in Brazilian politics.
Want a good example of that clientelism? Okay, how about this?
One of the State’s senators is...
José Sarney, ex-president of the republic and current
president of the Brazilian senate. He’s been accused of corruption more than
once – but never convicted.
And this is his daughter, Roseana.
She was forced to abandon
her bid for the presidency in 2002, when she was caught in her own corruption
scandal. Like her father, she wasn’t convicted.
Nor did the scandal prevent her from being elected to the senate a year later, a post in which she
served her state (and some would say the Sarney family) right up until the time
she “won” (surprise, surprise) the governorship.
Yup. Maranhão is that kind of a place.
No one, however, is suggesting, even for a moment, that anyone
from the State’s most prominent political family had anything to do with the
murder of Décio Sá. After all, if they had anything against him, surely they
wouldn’t have been employing him (which they did) on their newspaper...
O
Estado do Maranhão, the state’s
largest and most influential.
So, to discover
what happened to Décio, the cops are saying, they’ll have to look elsewhere.
And what they’re
looking at right now is Décio’s blog:
In it, he posted about the trial of gunmen implicated in a
murder that was allegedly ordered by a local businessman from a political
family. He posted about a case in which a local politician was implicated in a
prostitution ring and the murder of a university student. He posted about a lot
of things, and about a lot of people, and he made many enemies.
At least 47 (yeah, that's right, no typo, forty-seven) of whom, according to investigators, would have
had what they’d consider to be (remember, this is Maranhão we’re talking about)
"a good reason to kill him".
On the day of his death, Décio was sitting alone, in a
restaurant, waiting for a luncheon companion to arrive. A killer walked in,
shot him, and then escaped on the back of a motorcycle driven by an accomplice.
It was, investigators said, clearly a contract killing.
He was the fourth Brazilian reporter to be murdered in as
many months.
There is a movement afoot to make the killing of journalists
a federal crime, and thereby bring it into the purview of the federal police,
the least corrupt of Brazil’s law-enforcement agencies.
But no one expects the law to be passed anytime soon.
So what is the likelihood of achieving justice for Décio Sá?
There’s a glimmer of hope: on the basis of an anonymous tip,
two people were detained by the Civil Police and are currently being interrogated. This, in part, because the Sarneys are outraged that someone should have the effrontery to attack one of "their" journalists.
But, if the killers, in the end, fail to be apprehended, prosecuted and convicted, few people
in the State will be surprised.
That would simply be business as usual in Maranhão.
Décio, at his funeral, got some nice flowers from the state's first family.
And is survived by his pregnant wife and an eight-year-old
daughter.
Leighton - Monday