That's definitely a problem area. I didn't get into it in great length, but the report gets into quite a few suggestions for at least trying to bring to the attention of the authorities that the media, like everything in Honduras, I guess.... You have five or six, if not families, at least groups, that own the banks; they own the sources of media. They tend to get together behind closed walls and decide who should be the presidential candidate, and so on, and they have the power of finance, of course. To some extent, it is a problem in Honduras.
The press is extremely lurid. It's a terribly violent society, as I'm sure you're aware. It has the highest homicide rate in the world, I think, by quite a long shot. The press indulges in sensationalism; it does not indulge in serious, objective analysis of events.
There is a press that represents different perspectives, I suppose, but it's certainly the conservatives' press that seems to dominate, and to some extent, as a result, it doesn't always provide an objective view of what's happening.
Yes, journalists are very much an endangered species there, partly because of political reporting, but also because the drug situation has now become completely out of control. It was so even in my day, when I was involved. Any investigative journalists who were looking into the drug issues were subject to potential assassination, not for political reasons but because they were revealing issues related to drugs and drug abuse and so on.