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Lúcio Flávio Pinto (born c. 1950)〔 is an independent journalist who lives in Belém, Brazil. Formerly an employee of O Liberal, Brazil's largest media company, he later became the publisher and editor of the independent newsletter ''Jornal Pessoal''. In more than 42 years of reporting, Pinto has reported on a number of sensitive or dangerous topics, including drug trafficking, deforestation by ranchers and loggers, and military, political, and corporate corruption.〔〔 His reporting has led him to be the target of an assault, death threats, and 33 lawsuits. In 2005, he won an International Press Freedom Award from the Committee to Protect Journalists, a US-based NGO. In 2008, the ''Los Angeles Times'' described him as having the reputation of "an authoritative, stubbornly independent journalist who doesn't shrink from confronting some of Brazil's most potent interests".〔 == Career == Pinto was raised in a middle-class family in Santarém, Pará, Brazil.〔 He began reporting when he was 16. He spent the first half of his journalism career with the media company O Liberal, whose founder, Romulo Maiorana, was one of his best friends.〔 Following Maiorana's death, however, Pinto left the paper in 1987 after it refused to publish a piece in which he stated that two businessmen were implicated in the assassination of former congressman Paulo Fonteles.〔 He subsequently faced a number of lawsuits initiated by the company.〔 In 2005, he published a story about O Liberal's various holdings, and was assaulted two days later in a restaurant by Maiorana's son, Ronaldo Maiorana, and two bodyguards. Maiorana punched Pinto, and the three men kicked him when he fell to the ground, as Maiorana shouted "If I don't kill you now, I'll kill you later!"〔 The incident was caught on videotape.〔 When managers from O Liberal were later put on trial for tax evasion, Pinto was given an injunction by a federal court against covering the case; Reporters Without Borders described it as an example of "abusive judicial procedures to censor journalists". After leaving O Liberal, Pinto founded the bimonthly, 12-page independent magazine ''Jornal Pessoal''. Published in a newsletter format with a subscription of 2,000, the magazine emulates ''I. F. Stone's Weekly'', the 1960s self-published newsletter by US journalist I. F. Stone. Pinto refuses to accept advertising for the magazine, stating that it would compromise the magazine's independence.〔 Pinto also worked from 1974 to 1989 for ''O Estado de Sao Paulo''.〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Lúcio Flávio Pinto」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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