Ecuador targets cartoonist as world rejects Paris attacks
Ecuador’s president can’t take a joke. And now he wants to punish cartoonists for trying to make other people laugh.
As the world rallies to defend freedom of expression in Paris following last week’s deadly attack on Charlie Hebdo, the Ecuadoran government is dragging a critical cartoonist back to court for mocking a congressman from Rafael Correa’s ruling party.
“The media are supposed to be the watchdog of democracy; and while the terrorists in France tried to kill that dog, the government here is trying to pull out its teeth,” veteran cartoonist Xavier Bonilla told Fusion in a phone interview from Quito.
Bonilla, who goes by the penname “Bonil,” is being sued over a photo montage he made to poke fun at the dubious qualifications of some of Ecuador’s lawmakers. Specifically, the cartoon in question mocks Agustin Delgado, a former soccer player with no college degree, who won a seat in congress in 2013 on the coattails of President Correa. The first box shows Delgado stuttering through a speech where he says people think he’s a “poor guy” when they hear him talk, but — in the second box — he says that no one thinks he’s poor once they see how much he earns as a congressman.
It’s not exactly blasphemous stuff, but in a country where the government has come to think of itself as untouchable, Bonilla’s humor has angered officials to the point of litigation. Now, Bonilla’s newspaper, El Universo, has to go back to court to face accusations of promoting “socio-economic discrimination.”
The charge, brought last August by Afro-Ecuadoran groups with government ties, will now be reviewed by Ecuador’s powerful communications regulator, Supercom.
If Supercom finds Bonilla guilty, his newspaper will have to issue apologies for seven consecutive days in the same section where it publishes its cartoons. That’s not all. If Bonilla commits any future acts of “discrimination,” his paper would have to fork over ten percent of its trimestral earnings in fines, or around $500,000 — an Ecuadoran humor tithe, as it were.
Bonilla’s hearing was set for Jan. 16, but “inexplicably” moved to next month, two days after the Paris attacks.
It’s not the first time El Universo — or Bonilla— have been slapped with government fines. Last year the newspaper had to pay $90,000 for another one of his cartoons that mocked state security forces for raiding the home of an opposition leader in December of 2013, and taking computers and other electronic equipment from his home.