The president's hastily called meeting yesterday with his security cabinet and the country's governors was meant to show a united response to the slaying of reporters from one corner of Mexico to the other so far this year. On Monday, Javier Valdez in Culiacan, Sinaloa, became the sixth journalist slain in less than three months in six different states.
"Violence can't be part of daily life," Pena Nieto said. "Each crime against a journalist is a strike against freedom of expression and the press and the citizenry."
He promised more resources to help journalists under threat and for the special prosecutor's office tasked with investigating crimes against journalists.
Both measures have so far proven ineffective in stopping the bloodshed among the country's media workers. Mexico ranks behind only Syria and Afghanistan for such murders.
Ena Nieto also called for better coordination between federal and state authorities and the development of protocols for handling such investigations.
Pena Nieto seemed to allude to that fact yesterday, saying, "The murder of journalists and human rights defenders often is a symptom of greater phenomenon of impunity."
On Tuesday evening, several hundred journalists gathered in front of Mexico's Interior Department to protest the killings.
One of them, Alejandro Paez Varela, content director for the online outlet SinEmbargo.Mx, said Valdez's murder - in broad daylight and just a block from his newspaper Riodoce's office - was a demonstration of impunity.
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