Fernão Lara Mesquita
Fernão Lara Mesquita is a Brazilian journalist. He is a director of Grupo Estado, which publishes the daily newspaper O Estado de S. Paulo, the largest newspaper in Brazil, which has been in the Mesquita family for many generations. Grupo Estado also publishes Jornal da Tarde, owns a radio network, and owns Agência Estado, Brazil's leading news agency. Mesquita is also the former opinion-page editor of O Estado de S. Paulo.[1]
Mesquita has taken a leading role in the struggle for freedom of expression in Brazil. In a talk delivered at the 2011 Oslo Freedom Forum, he drew attention to the long history of government censorship in that country.[2]
Early life and education
Mesquita was born into Brazil's most prominent family of journalists; his forebears were strongly anti-communist and anti-fascist and outspokenly opposed to government censorship. His father, Ruy Mesquita, who died in 2013, was a lawyer “with deep liberal convictions” who became the publisher of the family's newspaper, O Estado de S.Paulo, after the death in 1996 of his, Ruy's, older brother Júlio de Mesquita Neto.[3] Júlio has been credited with “almost single-handedly leading the successful battle against censorship” in Brazil;[4] Ruy, for his part, was deeply involved in the late 20th-century struggle to make Brazil a stable democracy and a world power. In 1967, after the country's military rulers violated human rights and broke their promise to hold elections, Ruy and Júlio became leading voices in the opposition to military rule and the fight against government censorship.[3]
Fernão's paternal grandfather, Julio Mesquito Filho, and great-grandfather were also prominent journalists for O Estado; both have been described as having played a major role in shaping “the institutions of the Brazilian republic.” In a talk delivered at the Oslo Freedom Forum in 2011, Fernão Lara Mesquita pointed out that O Estado “was born when Brazil was still a monarchy,” and that his ancestors, who founded it and, as of 2011, had been publishing it for 136 years, had “fought for the end of slavery and for the republic.” Over the generations, noted Fernão, members of his family had been “fighting all kinds of govts and dictators,” resulting in the arrest of his grandfather on 17 occasions, the appropriation of the newspaper, the invasion of its offices by military forces, and the bombing of those offices by terrorists of both the left and right.[5]
Fernão Lara Mesquita studied at the Universidade de São Paulo from 1970 to 1974, receiving degrees in philosophy and education.
Career
Mesquita was editorial director of Jornal da Tarde from 1989 to 2003, and editorial director of the opinion page of O Estado de S. Paulo from 1998 to 2003. He was on the board of directors of Grupo Estado from 2003 to 2011. He was president of Greenpeace Brasil in 2005-6. Since 2003, he has served on the board of directors of O Estado de São Paulo, in addition to working as a journalist for that newspaper.[6]
Views on democracy and censorship
In his 2011 Oslo speech, Mesquita lamented that Latin America was “maybe in the lowest point in a decade on freedom of speech.” Presenting a vision of gradual improvement over time, despite ups and downs along the way, he said: “I'm not sure still if my son will be able to live in a full democracy, but he will not pay the price my grandfather paid....it's a long and winding road, but it will get to an end.” He also expressed concern about the Brazilian economy, observing that the free market in his country had been negatively affected by the impact of “Chinese state capitalism,” pressure from which had contributed to the formation of monopolistic conglomerates. Mesquita added that he did not share the enthusiasm of many participants in the Oslo Freedom Forum for the potential of new technologies as tools for freedom, warning that they can also serve as tools of repression.[5]
In a June 2014 article, Mesquita accused Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff of engineering a “coup against democracy” and charged the media with taking an “ostrich attitude” toward her actions. Her “coup,” he stated, took the form of Decree No. 8243, which, by establishing a so-called “National System of Social Participation,” essentially proclaimed that Brazilian civil society would henceforth consist not of all Brazilians but of “an undefined group of 'social movements'” that would apparently enjoy special power not granted to them by either the constitution or the electorate.[7]
Film
Mesquita wrote the screenplay for the 2007 “investigative film,” Atlantic Forest and the Cycles of Life (Mata Atlântica e os Ciclos da Vida), which examines the ecosystem of the Atlantic Forest.[8]
Other
He is fluent in Portuguese, English, French, and Spanish.
References
- ↑ "Fernao Lara Mesquita". Oslo Freedom Forum. Retrieved 18 May 2016.
- ↑ "Repression in Brazil Past and Present". Oslo Freedom Forum. Retrieved 18 May 2016.
- 1 2 "Brazil Institute Mourns the Passing Journalist Ruy Mesquita". Wilson Center. Retrieved 18 May 2016.
- ↑ "Júlio De Mesquita Neto, Brazil - Global Journalist".
- 1 2 "Fernão Lara Mesquita - Repression in Brazil: Past and Present". www.youtube.com. YouTube. Retrieved 18 May 2016.
- ↑ "LinkedIn Page". www.linkedin.com. Brazil LinkedIn. Retrieved 18 May 2016.
- ↑ "'Acorda, jornalista!', de Fernão Lara Mesquita".
- ↑ "Atlantic Forest and the Cycles of Life (Mata Atlântica e os Ciclos da Vida)".