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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkNews Around the Republic of Mexico | October 2006 

NYC Journalist Killed in Oaxaca Shootout
email this pageprint this pageemail usColleen Long - Associated Press


Brad Will in zocalo Oaxaca, Mexico 2 days ago. (Hinrich Schultze via nyc.imc)
Undeterred by violence, journalist Brad Will felt compelled to document what he called human rights abuses around the globe, so he headed to the volatile city of Oaxaca in Mexico.

As the situation turned increasingly dangerous, Will decided to stay. Despite his fears, he wanted people to know what was happening in Oaxaca.

"I am entering a new territory here and don't know if I am ready," Will wrote Tuesday in an e-mail to an ex-girlfriend. "Life is crazy."

The 36-year-old videographer from New York was killed Friday in the Mexican city where protesters have barricaded streets and occupied government buildings for five months in a bid to oust the governor.

The gunfire erupted in a rough neighborhood when armed men, possibly police, tried to remove a blockade set up by protesters who were demanding the resignation of Oaxaca Gov. Ulises Ruiz.

"It appears that Mr. Will was killed during a shoot out between what may have been local police" and protesters, Tony Garza, U.S. Ambassador to Mexico, said in a written statement.

However, it wasn't clear who fired the shot that killed Will, who was working for Indymedia.org, an independent Web-based media organization, and selling video footage on a freelance basis.

Word that he died at a Red Cross hospital after being shot in the abdomen spread quickly in New York City, where he had lived for more than a decade.

Early Saturday, scores of friends crammed into a small bookstore here to remember Will, whom they described as a passionate activist.

Beka Economopoulous, a New York activist and friend, said Will's death would leave a void in places where journalists are needed.

"The community here will miss him," she said. "Not only because he was a beautiful person, but because the work he was doing was so important. He was passionate about documenting the ills of the world."

Will had been documenting the upheaval in Oaxaca in Internet dispatches for nearly a month. His reports showed he had strong sympathies with the movement.

"What can you say about this movement, this revolutionary moment," he wrote in a dispatch dated Oct. 16. "You know it is building, growing, shaping, you can feel it, trying desperately for a direct democracy."

Fellow documentarian Josh Bregman, who recently returned from Oaxaca, said he felt safe within the barricades among the citizens, but not when police were looming.

"The people that I was with thought my camera would keep them safe," Bregman said. "They didn't think anyone would shoot gringo journalists."

Friends described Will as tall and lanky with long brown hair, glasses and a scruffy beard. He loved folk music, played the guitar and had a huge heart.

"He was a warm, gentle person, who lit up the room with his songs and his cheer," said Brandon Jourdan, a former roommate.

Associated Press Writer Rebeca Romero contributed to this report from Oaxaca, Mexico.

On The Net: http://www.indymedia.org





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