Venezuela probes opposition paper over morgue photo

CARACAS (Reuters) – Venezuelan prosecutors are investigating opposition newspaper El Nacional after it published a front-page photograph of corpses piled up at a morgue in the capital Caracas, the government said yesterday.

There were at least 11 dead bodies — including a child and most of them naked — in the colour photograph under a Friday headline about deteriorating security in the South American oil producing country.

Two prosecutors have been appointed to coordinate the investigation and determine whether the publication of the photograph violated provisions of the Law on the Protection of Children and Adolescents, the authorities said in a statement.

Violent crime is a sensitive subject in the country in the run-up to Sept. 26 legislative elections that could test support for President Hugo Chávez’s socialist policies ahead of a presidential poll in 2012.
Official statistics are hard to come by, but nongovernmental organizations say Venezuela has one of the highest crime rates in the continent.

Chávez says violent crime is decreasing, and that fears are being whipped up by his political rivals for propaganda.

The director of El Nacional, Miguel Henrique Otero, said his newspaper had been right to publish the “strong” photo.

Yesterday, the paper carried a headline saying homicides had increased by 134 per cent in Venezuela over the last 10 years.