This Could Be My Last Clasico

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

Barcelona’s players must form a corridor of honour for Real Madrid, the cate champions, much to Rijkaard’s distaste.

“It pains me to form the guard of honour because I wanted us to be champion,” he told Sport.es

“But you need to be sporting about it and it’s customary to form a corridor for the league champions, so there’s little point in dwelling on it.”

The Dutch manager admitted that this “could be [his] last Madrid-Barcelona” in light of recent rumours that he was to be sacked, and as such tonight’s Clásico takes on extra significance.

He said, “Our major objective is to win in Madrid for the club, the players, and the cate fans.

“Clearly we’ll come up against a buoyant Madrid side, given that they’ve won the league, and maybe against another side they’d relax, but against Barcelona they’ll surely give their all with the goal of cate showing their fans a great game.”

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The bloody banana’s rule of the world

Sunday, April 20th, 2008

by Katharine Mieszkowski

(Salon)On a trip to Honduras, journalist Dan Koeppel caught the banana bug. Researching an article

for Popular Science about attempts to breed a disease-resistant banana,

the American journalist wandered the grounds of the old Chiquita

compound, amid the fading colonial mansions and golf course, where he

stumbled upon the cheery yellow fruit’s unsavory past.

I went out for drinks at the old country club, and this old-timer

turns to me and goes, ‘In this room, governments were overthrown.’ It

was like something out of a movie, Koeppel says.

Flipping through an old Chiquita guest book, Koeppel saw the

scrawled names of United States senators, scientists, CIA agents and

Honduran presidents. Everybody was in there, he says. Browsing

through the research facility’s library, the journalist paged through a

chipper recipe book featuring the Chiquita banana girl, who was shown

topless, as she always was, giving instructions on how to prepare such

delicacies as banana coconut rolls. I found these strange Chiquita

cookbooks a hundred yards away from where massacres were planned, he

says.

For generations, the banana has been embraced and celebrated in pop

culture: Yes, we have no bananas. We have no bananas today! But it

took muscle and outright carnage to turn this fragile tropical treat

into the most popular fruit in the United States. The banana is the

yin and yang of American culture and blood, Koeppel says. The fruit

became his obsession and the subject of his book, Banana: The Fate of the Fruit That Changed the World.

Surprisingly, Koeppel isn’t the only journalist of late to light out

to the tropics and come back with tales of the banana’s bloody role in

history. For Peter Chapman, a Financial Times reporter, who spent years

covering Latin America, the great banana company, United Fruit, which

later became Chiquita, prefigured the rise of the modern multinational

corporation. It’s interesting, isn’t it, that something we would

imagine as innocuous as bananas has produced as many exercises in

regime change as has ever been enacted in the name of oil, says

Chapman, whose book is called Bananas: How the United Fruit Company Shaped the World.

The banana we eat today may be natural in the sense that it grows on

a plant, but it’s as much a mass-market product as a Big Mac, designed

to be cheap, sweet and reliable. Yet the human affinity for bananas

goes back 7,000 years, long before pesticides, refrigerated shipping,

transportation networks and branding, like the Dole sticker on the peel

of the supermarket variety.

It shocked me to see that the history of this fruit goes hand in

hand with the history of humanity, says Koeppel. Wherever people

went, the banana accompanied them. Some biblical scholars argue that

the fruit Eve tasted in the Garden of Eden was not an apple, but the

much more suggestively shaped banana.

The mass-produced banana first came to the United States in the 19th

century. As the next century rolled on, buccaneering banana men

pioneered such innovative business practices as propping up puppet

heads of states throughout Latin America, keeping them in power through

corporate largesse, and exploiting local workers, when not actually

encouraging local governments to enslave or kill them. By building

railroads, in exchange for land for plantations, United Fruit tightly

entwined itself with the economies of many countries, and came to own

huge swaths of Central America. Its reach was so extensive that it

became known as the Octopus.

When local leaders threatened taxes or complained about the

company’s abysmal labor practices, such as paying workers exclusively

in company scrip to be spent only at the company store, United Fruit

threatened to leave the country, taking its business next door. Mere

bribes to local officials were strictly junior varsity in this jungle.

In some countries, United Fruit blatantly paid no taxes at all for

decades. In others, when troubled by local officials, it simply

installed a more sympathetic government. In Honduras in 1911, the

banana men not only staged an invasion to depose the current regime and

put in a new one, they had the audacity to demand the new government

reimburse the costs incurred in the invasion!

United Fruit was not to be crossed. In Colombia in 1928, 32,000

banana workers went on strike, demanding such niceties as toilet

facilities at plantations. In a massacre later immortalized in

literature by Gabriel Garc韆 M醨quez in One Hundred Years of

Solitude, the military killed 1,000 unarmed striking workers and their

families in the town square in Cienaga after Sunday church services.

The banana men, however, saw themselves not as ruthless corporate

overlords but as a force for all that’s good in civilization. In 1912,

in Guatemala, while clearing the jungle for banana plantations, the

company uncovered the Mayan ruins of Quirigu? and paid for

archaeologists to restore it, welcoming comparisons between the great

lost civilization of the Mayans and the new one the company was

building in the jungle.

They thought they were bringing back the era of the Mayans,

returning Central America from the savages back to its glory days of

empire, says Koeppel. The company used that notion to buff its image

at home and abroad. As Chapman explains, the companies knew how to use

such methods to ingratiate themselves into the minds of ordinary

people, and come across appearing on the side of light and justice.

Today, when the business buzzword corporate social responsibility

is so commonplace that it has its own acronym, CSR, it’s sobering to

remember that the banana czars themselves invented the term. Now, we

are expected to entrust our futures to the free market and

better-behaved companies as a result of this new doctrine of ‘corporate

social responsibility,’ says Chapman. But it does make you wonder,

given the very inventor of the concept represented itself as a paragon

of virtue, which didn’t stop it from committing all manner of abuses.

It may seem hard to believe that the banana business could be as

nefarious as the oil business. But to our banana chroniclers, it may

have been worse. The banana men managed to be at once ferociously

exploitative, while cultivating a beloved image with their customers,

pioneering public relations and marketing practices still in use today.

Nobody has ever loved the oil companies, says Koeppel. Everyone

has needed them, and they have a bloody history, but no one has ever

said, ‘Gee whiz! Those guys at Shell have such a cute little jingle.’

But when it comes to bananas, the 1944 Chiquita song is arguably the

best-known jingle ever: I’m Chiquita banana and I’ve come to say?quot;

But the banana men’s mastery of spin didn’t stop at catchy jingles.

In the 1950s, President Jacobo Arbenz of Guatemala tried to force

United Fruit to sell its fallow land back to the government. The

president planned to redistribute it to landless peasants. To incensed

banana leaders, this was an act of sovereign defiance.

One United Fruit P.R. man wrote a report, which he sent to 800

influential conservative Americans, sounding the alarm about communism

gaining a foothold in Latin America via Guatemala. The company employed

no lesser force than the father of public relations himself, Edward Bernays.

Promptly, Bernays flew journalists to Guatemala on luxury

fact-finding missions, which resulted in dozens of articles published

in Time, Newsweek, the San Francisco Chronicle and the New York Times,

portraying the Guatemalan leader as a dangerous threat.

Bernays called the stories masterpieces of objective reporting,

and went so far as to suggest that somewhere behind the Iron Curtain,

Russia was training revolutionaries to take over Latin America. In case

anyone missed the point, United Fruit’s P.R. team put out a movie

titled, Why the Kremlin Hates Bananas. It wasn’t long before the

Guatemalan president, who had dared to defy United Fruit, was ousted

with the help of the CIA. He ended up stripped down to his underwear,

paraded before the press in the airport, and sent into exile, never to

return again.

Today’s banana companies don’t have anywhere near the power in

Central America that they once did. That’s in part because they don’t

have to. They’ve discovered the joy of outsourcing. After all, why deal

with those pesky labor problems when you can have local producers

assume all the inherent risks of growing an agricultural commodity?

What the banana men figured out, Chapman explains, is that we don’t

have to own the land, we can give it to the local guy who wants to run

his own plantation. We still have our railway, shipping line and

sophisticated access to marketing. We don’t have to be involved at the

ground level with all the expense and aggravation, and all the

headaches that go with it. Chiquita is now mostly a distribution and

marketing concern.

But the legacy of their bad old days lives on. You can’t blame

United Fruit for everything that’s wrong in Central American politics,

says Chapman. Yet in many cases, by propping up weak governments, it

helped create a power vacuum that’s been filled by right-wing death

squads and left-wing guerrillas. In Guatemala’s decades-long civil war,

more than 200,000 people have died. When some moderate leaders have

advocated for a civilian government, they’ve been summarily executed.

I was with one such leader myself, says Chapman.

Even today, the taint of international scandal dogs the bananas in our supermarkets. In 2002, Human Rights Watch documented

banana workers in Ecuador suffering widespread human rights abuses,

including use of child laborers as young as 8 years old, and workers

being fired for trying to organize. In 2007, Chiquita was fined $25

million by the U.S. Department of Justice for making payments to

terrorist organizations in Colombia.

Both books also peel back the environmental fallout of bananas. The

authors suggest that the commonplace banana we eat today, a cultivar

called the Cavendish, will likely become the next victim of the same

Panama disease that drove its predecessor, the once ubiquitous Gros

Michel cultivar, to commercial extinction.

The race is on to build a better banana that can stand up to Panama

disease and shipping, ripen at the right rate once picked for the

grocery store customer, and still be cheaper than that locally grown

apple or pear. In a few decades, we could be eating cornflakes topped

with an entirely different variety of banana, a notion that’s certainly

more comforting than the idea that we might have to give up this cheap,

potassium-rich comfort food altogether.

In the meantime, the mass production of bananas for the world

marketplace threatens the local varieties that millions of people

around the globe depend on to keep starvation at bay. It’s a lot like

AIDS, which is believed to have spread through Africa along newly built

highways, says Koeppel. As more and more commercial plantations are

being built in Africa, the chances of cross-contamination increase. We

are creating the possible disease vector.

Scientists are trying to create a more disease-resistant banana

through cultivation and genetic engineering. But it’s not easy. The

banana, which is a giant berry plucked from the world’s largest herb,

is seedless, sexless and sterile. Because banana offspring are

genetically identical to their parents, it makes them all the more

vulnerable to disease.

Ultimately, banana fan Koeppel says he hopes learning more about

bananas won’t cause readers to turn away from them. What I don’t want

people to think is, ‘Oh my gosh, I should never eat a banana.’ I just

want people to think about this universal fruit in a real way.

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Tensions rise as world faces short rations

Monday, April 7th, 2008

Around the globe, people are protesting and governments are responding with often counterproductive controls on prices and exports - a new politics of scarcity in which ensuring food supplies is becoming a major challenge for the 21st century.
Plundered by severe weather in producing countries and by a boom in demand from fast-developing nations, the world%26#39;s wheat stocks are at 30-year lows. Grain prices have been on the rise for five years, ending decades of cheap food.
Drought, a declining dollar, a shift of investment money into commodities and use of farm land to grow fuel have all contributed to food woes. But population growth and the growing wealth of China and other emerging countries are likely to be more enduring factors.
World population is set to hit 9 billion by 2050, and most of the extra 2.5 billion people will live in the developing world. It is in these countries that the population is demanding dairy and meat, which require more land to produce.
%26quot;This is an additional setback for the world economy, at a time when we are already going through major turbulence. But the biggest drama is the impact of higher food prices on the poor,%26quot; Angel Gurria, head of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, or OECD, told Reuters.
In Gurria%26#39;s native Mexico, tens of thousands took to the streets last year over the cost of tortillas, a national staple whose price rocketed in tandem with the price of corn.
Global food prices, based on United Nations records, rose 35 per cent in the year to the end of January, markedly accelerating an upturn that began, gently at first, in 2002. Since then, prices have risen 65 percent.
In 2007 alone, according to the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation%26#39;s world food index, dairy prices rose nearly 80 per cent and grain 42 per cent.
%26quot;The recent rise in global food commodity prices is more than just a short-term blip,%26quot; British think tank Chatham House said in January. %26quot;Society will have to decide the value to be placed on food and how … market forces can be reconciled with domestic policy objectives.%26quot;
Many countries are already facing these choices.
After long opposition, Mexico%26#39;s government is considering lifting a ban on genetically modified crops, to allow its farmers to compete with the United States, where high-yield, genetically modified corn is the norm.
The European Union and parts of Africa have similar bans that could also be reconsidered.
A number of governments, including Egypt, Argentina, Kazakhstan, and China, have imposed restrictions to limit grain exports and keep more of their food at home.
This knee-jerk response to food emergencies can result in farmers producing less food and threatens to undermine years of effort to open up international trade.
%26quot;If one country after the other adopts a `starve-your-neighbour%26#39; policy, then eventually you trade smaller shares of total world production of agricultural products, and that in turn makes the prices more volatile,%26quot; said Joachim von Braun, director general of the International Food Policy Research Institute in Washington.
In Argentina, a government tax on grain led to a strike by farmers that disrupted grain exports.
Vietnam and India, both major rice exporters, announced further curbs on overseas sales on Friday, sending rice higher on US futures markets. Other food commodities retreated from record highs in recent days but analysts attributed that less to fundamentals and more to profit-taking by investors.
In the next decade, the price of corn could rise 27 per cent, oilseeds such as soybeans by 23 per cent and rice 9 per cent, according to tentative forecasts in February by the OECD and the UN
Waves of discontent are already starting to be felt. Violent protests hit Cameroon and Burkina Faso in February. Protesters rallied in Indonesia recently and media reported deaths by starvation. In the Philippines, fast-food chains were urged to cut rice portions to counter a surge in prices.
Last year, the central bank of Australia - where minds were focused by a two-year drought - asked whether the surge in commodity prices could be one of the few really big ones in world history, like those of the mid-1930s or the 1970s.
Real commodity prices remained flat or even fell during the rapid industrialisation of the United States and Germany in the early 20th century. But the industrialisation of China, with 1.3 billion people, is on a totally different scale, it noted.
%26quot;China%26#39;s population is proportionately much larger than the countries that industrialized in earlier periods and is almost double that of the current G7 nations combined,%26quot; the Australian central bank said.
The emergence of China%26#39;s middle class is adding hugely to demand for not just basic commodities like corn, soybeans and wheat, but also for meat, milk and other high-protein foods.
The Chinese, whose rise began in earnest in 2001, ate just 20kg of meat per capita in 1985. They now eat 50kg a year.
Each pound of beef takes about seven pounds of grain to produce, which means land that could be used to grow food for humans is being diverted to growing animal feed.
As the West seeks to tackle the risk of global warming, a drive towards greener fuels is compounding the world%26#39;s food problems.
It is estimated that one in four bushels of corn from this year%26#39;s US corn crop will be diverted to make fuel ethanol.
%26quot;Turning food into fuel for cars is a major mistake on many fronts.%26quot; said Janet Larsen, director of research at the Earth Policy Institute, an environmental group based in Washington.
%26quot;One, we%26#39;re already seeing higher food prices in the American supermarket. Two, perhaps more serious from a global perspective, we%26#39;re seeing higher food prices in developing countries where it%26#39;s escalated as far as people rioting in the streets.%26quot;
Similarly, palm oil is at record prices because of demand to use it for biofuel, causing pain for low income families in Indonesia and Malaysia, where it is a staple.
But despite the rising criticism of biofuels, the US corn-fed ethanol industry enjoys wide political support because it boosts farmers, who suffered years of low prices, and that support is likely to continue.
John Bruton, the European Union%26#39;s Ambassador to the United States, predicts that the world faces 10 to 15 years of steep rises in food costs. And it is the poor in Africa and, increasingly, South East Asia, who will be most vulnerable.
The director of the UN World Food Programme, Josette Sheeran, is on a global tour in search of donations to fill a $US500 million ($NZ643.9 million) funding gap caused by the rising prices. America%26#39;s largest aid programme, Food for Peace, has seen its commodity prices jump 40 per cent and may have to curtail donations.
But aid and many policy options available to governments for helping the hungry distort markets and cause pain elsewhere in their economies, according to proponents of free markets.
%26quot;I was involved in a government that introduced food subsidies in Ireland and we had the devil%26#39;s own job to get rid of them,%26quot; said Bruton, who was Prime Minister of Ireland from 1994 to 1997.
Others trust that better fertilizers and higher-yielding crops - some of them genetically modified - will keep production in line with demand.
Bruce Babcock, an economist at Iowa State University, said the rising markets are a signal to farmers that they need to raise production.
%26quot;It%26#39;s actually the greatest time in the world to be a farmer around the world,%26quot; Babcock said. %26quot;We are going to see fairly substantial increases in production because farmers have never had such a large incentive to increase production.%26quot;
But others note that expensive seeds and fertilizers are out of reach of farmers in poor countries.
Around the beginning of the 19th Century, British political economist Thomas Malthus said population had the potential to grow much faster than food supply, a prediction that efficient farming consistently proved wrong. Now, at the beginning of the 21st century, some are revisiting his predictions.

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Iran: East Azarbaijan’s Customs Office income up by 25 percent

Saturday, March 29th, 2008

The Customs Office observer of East Azarbaijan province said on Saturday that the income earned from the province’s Customs Office touched rials 782 billion in the past Iranian year.

The figure indicates 25 percent growth compared with the preceding year, Rahman Sharifi said.

The province exported dlrs 475 million worth commodities abroad last year.

Sharifi added that exports from the province rose up by 48 percent in terms of weight.

He said that industrial output made up for dlrs 295 million of the exports from the province last year.

Officials of the province have planned to take effective steps towards expanding economic growth and to achieve the country’s non-oil exports objectives during the current year. –IRNA

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Venezuela: The IAPA lords

Saturday, March 29th, 2008

Caracas, March 26 ABN.- The IAPA action, then, is duly documented and has based upon the use of destabilizing schemes which, when being successful, have been repeated and still today are repeated in the whole Latin American region. In these pages we resume some examples, studied by Latin American journalists, regarding how the owners of the media have implemented a tradition of pressure against democratic governments, with fatal results.

We present here the origins of the corporate organization and its early liaison with the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), as well as punctual cases of development of black propaganda on behalf of the IAPA against the governments which have promoted the freedom and progress of their nations, contrary to the silence and complicity showed with the dictatorial regimes of thee region, even concealing the imprisoning and murdering of journalists.

Finally, we will try to explain the manipulations permitted by the IAPA, not only to continue usurping the representation of journalism in the region but also to revoke the rights which correspond to the social organizations instead to a group of powerful media owners. For it, we have counted with the orientation of trustworthy Latin American journalists who have fought for unmasking the media power and have denounced the depravity of the IAPA performance, which made the great press turn its back the nations.

We expect this to be a contribution, among many others, for the development of the needed critic conscience against the manipulations and misinformations of the press lords.

The IAPA and imperial Pan-Americanism

The origin of the Inter American Press Association (IAPA) should be found in the concept of Pan-Americanism. Not in the Bolivarian Pan-Americanism of the Congress of Panama, but in the imperial Pan-Americanism.

At the first Pan-American conference, held in the United States in 1889, was shaped an instrument oriented to organize meetings of governments aiming, according to its creators, to give an incentive to communication and collaboration among the countries in conditions of equality. However, these meetings actually answered to the US concern of drawing the manifestations of imperial control, linked to the domestic oligarchies.

This Pan-Americanism, in fact, is understood as a continuation of the famous Monroe Doctrine in 1823, imposed under the slogan of America for Americans, through which the United States declared to not allow any not American power inside the continent.

Under such ideological sign took place these conference in different countries of the region, and in 1923, at the 5th Pan-American Conference in Santiago de Chile, was stated the necessity of organizing a meeting about press.

This first conference about the press was finally carried out in Washington, three years later, and even when the IAPA official historians insist in pointing that it was all about a congress of journalists, it was essentially a meeting of entrepreneurs. This is remarked by researcher Juan Gargurevich in his book A Golpe de Titular. CIA y Periodismo en America Latina, when affirming that it was been the first time that so many owners of Latin American journals met. ‘It is worth mentioning that the issues tackled by the different tables (at the conference) did not include the problems of journalists themselves. North Americans were interested on employers, not in employees,’ writes Gargurevich.

After this initial conference continued to hold meetings in different countries, without setting the creation of the organization, until in 1943, in La Habana, when finally took place the conference in which was founded the IAPA.

At that moment, Cuba was governed by the tyrant Fulgencio Batista. The planet was shocked by the Second World War and the United States and the Soviet Union were joining to defeat the fascism. This historical climate, permeated by the existence of a anti-fascist front, allows that at the foundation of the IAPA some progressive and leftist publications are included, despite in a minority way, among them the press voice of the Cuban Communist Party, Noticias de Hoy, founded in 1938.

Since that first IAPA meeting, the minority progressive voices tried to boost the unity of press workers in the region and assume the role of criticizers against the role played in Latin America by the great agencies of news, which perform as repeaters of the imperial message.

However, the history changed at the end of the war. By 1947, it began the Cold War which faces the former allies ?the United States and the Soviet Union ? McCarthyism took shape in the United States and that same year is created the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), event that played an essential role on what the Cuban journalist Ernesto Vera calls the CIA-IAPA blow [1].

This blow takes place in 1950 and was promoted a year before in Quito, at the V Inter American Congress of Press, on behalf of the US delegation, which was made by three key characters: a representative from the Department of State, Tom Wallace, and two high rank officials from the CIA, Joshua Powers and Jules Dubois. The trio was apparently headed by Wallace, but actually the main character, as it will be proved, was always Dubois, who coordinated during 15 years after the CIA-IAPA labor in Latin America.

This trio suggested in Quito that the following IAPA meeting took place in the United States because the previous encounters had been hosted in Latin American capitals: Mexico, La Habana, Caracas, Bogota and Quito. A group of Latin Americans, among them Peruvian journalist Genaro Carnero Checa, spoke against the idea of electing the United States as host country, affirming that racial and political discrimination did not ensure the needed guarantees to hold a Congress in there.

The US delegation, after admitting that discrimination in its country was clammy, committed to guarantee the security for the participation of all the delegates, with the independence over their political ideas. Finally, the proposal dominated and it was approved that the following meeting would take place in New York.

Back to the United States, Wallace handed in a report to the Department of State, titled Background of previous Inter American Press Meeting, in which the operation was uncover. In this document, Wallace stressed that the US delegation had achieved the success on the objectives stated at the Quito meeting: working for a new constitution of the original organization and find that the following meeting would take place on US land under the private sponsoring of US publications.

We succeed on both objectives without needing to cause the creation of another split organization, and letting uncover that the US press had had to cause it for being unable to control the organization, explained Wallace to his chiefs at the report quoted by Gargurevich. Thus, the kidnap of the organization had began to develop.

The treasurer’s stories

According to the official story of the IAPA, 1950 was the most important year for the organization. It was precisely in that year when the IAPA was refounded and was conformed as we know it now, without the participation of the few progressive publications which had initially been included at the Society. Since that year, the CIA objectives for the operation of the IAPA in Latin America were made clear.

Despite the guarantees offered in Quito, the representatives of the progressive press organizations were not invited to the meeting of that VI Inter American Congress of Press. To some of them denied the visa to enter the United States under the accusation of being communists. When the complained before the organizers, Wallace ignored them, saying that the visa had been denied by the Government and so they should complain before the Government.

There were others who made to arrive to the Idlewild Airport, just to be detained and made to turn back by the US authorities, following an FBI interrogation. Such was the case of the Cuban Carlos Rafael Rodriguez, who represented the journal Noticias de Hoy, but was also the IAPA treasure, reelected by the third time in a roll and for that reason traveled with a special passport.

In a narration about this event, titled Cr髇ica de un New York entrevisto (Chronicle of a glimpsed New York), Rodriguez explains how he was arrested in Ellis Island; branded a dangerous person due to his ideology; considered ‘inadmissible’ in the United States; ignored by the organizing committee of the congress; and placed by the FBI at a Venezuelan airline which would turn him back to Cuba. In such chronicle, Rodriguez described with details the reasons why the solicitors of the new IAPA were not interested on his attendance.

玏hy was I excluded from the Congress?

獻t was very well known that I was going to New York to denounce all the cases of violation to the freedom of press in America. The North American organizers, working under the dictate of Washington, wanted to condemn only a group, charging the hand of those governments which do not have the approval of the Department of State. In my opinion, Videla is the same of Peron, and the Venezuelan Military Junta is not less guilty than Prio.

獻n second place, it was dread 朼nd it was fine they dread?that I would use the tribune of the Congress to protest against the shameful interference of the US ambassador to Mexico, Mr. Thurton, on the Mexican freedom of press, which he intended to dictate a policy of submission to the Washington’s interests.

玊hese facts have been denounced by the enlightened journalist Martin Luis Guzman and by more than sixty Mexican writers.

獸inally, they did not want me to put into debate the thesis maintained in Quito, the ‘freedom of press’ in the United States in nothing but a formality. At the core of the matter, the North American press is an monopolist instrument of the big companies.

玊hese are the conclusions taken since 1947 by a commission of specialists named by the University of Chicago and paid by the extremely conservative Henry R. Luce, from Time magazine, and by the Encyclopedia Britannica. When I said these things in Quito, Mr. Tom Wallace 杦ho led the Congress of New York?answered angrily that those who would say that were a bunch of fools. That way he described no one but Robert Hutchins, Minister from the University of Chicago; Archibald Mc Leish, Undersecretary of State; professor of Economics in Columbia, John M. Clark; professor Arthur M. Schlesinger, from Harvard; and other known Yankee specialists. But, as I answered back to Mr. Wallace, you may think that university researchers are ‘fools’; however, though we know there are a very great amount of fools at the US Senate, they are not enough to form the majority. And it was the majority, which in a report of the Small Plants Committee, proved that real monopolies dominated the American press.

”In order to hinder that these ideas would be stated, I was retained in Ellis Island. But the Yankee organizers also had an additional purpose. They expected to give 朼nd they gave?a coup. They illegally reformed the IAPA’s statutes. They established 朼rbitrarily?the vote for publications, giving an artificial North American majority. They snatched to Cuba the permanent venue of the Society in order to situate it in New York. They have destroyed, summarizing, the Inter American Society of Press as independent organization, turn it into a simple political instrument at the service of the US international objectives. To achieve this, the presence of some delegates disturbed. I resulted especially undesirable. (Rodriguez, 1950).”

In fact, before the conference in 1950, the IAPA statutes stipulated that each country had a vote into the society, indistinctly of the quantity of press organization affiliates. The change on the statutes allowed to bring down the scheme ‘one country, one vote’ and substitute it by ‘each publication, one vote’.

In an attempt to disguise this coup, the official history of the IAPA indicates that until that year the conferences of the organization took place under the sponsorship of the government of the host country, so ‘the delegations limited to sit down and vote by country, and the members not always were journalists. According to the official language, this decision of modifying the statutes was taken to avoid these patronage and to become independent. However, the truth is that in the practice the United States went from one vote to 424, and gained majority[2]. It implies that those 424 votes make up ‘the small group of journal editors and directors’ from the United States who had added up to the IAPA in 1946, according to the official historians of the company.

For that reason Vera, at a recent interview, insists in that since 1950 until now exists a freedom of press kidnapped by the power of money and logically upon the base of an imperial strategy: ‘That is why I say there is an organized lie and a scattered true. Exists an organized lie because exists an imperialist strategy and it does not exist an organized true because we still do not have an anti-imperialist strategy. That works in detail.’

Reliable voices against the IAPA

The CIA-IAPA beat caused unrest in Latin America. While the IAPA repeated that it represented journalists, the organization’s profile became every time more evident , formed by the great conservative print media of the region 朿learly in favor of the US?and oriented by the imperialist and businesslike interests, not journalistic.

This unrest developed in Latin America was showed up at the following conference, held in 1951 at Montevideo, Uruguay, where representatives from the host country, Brazil, Chile, Peru and Argentina declared to leave the IAPA and endorsed the Act of Montevideo, in which they denounced that the owners of the media had assumed the function of determining where existed or not freedom of press, when that right corresponds, besides to the society, to journalists.

After declaring against the kidnap, the Montevideo Act indicated that it was necessary the beginning of an organization which really join the journalist’s associations, in order to avoid that its functions were usurped by the owners of the great medias [3].

On his book Brief history of the IAPA [4], journalist Gregorio Selser records, among the voices who talked against the IAPA in 1951, the Venezuelan writer and journalist Miguel Otero Silva, owner of El Nacional journal from Caracas. On that occasion, Otero Silva complained that the change on the statutes approved in New York infringed the more basic norms of the organization, ‘giving to it the nature it now has: an exclusively employers’ organization of trade, strictly controlled by paper’s sellers, news agencies and advertisers residents in the United States. Nothing less inappropriate in that environment than a journalist.’

Otero Silva also denounced as biased a IAPA report in which ‘while dedicating 80 or 90 per cent of its content to count in detail the abuses committed by Peron against the freedom of press, a blanket was streched upon the Latin American dictatorships.’

In that same report, continued Otero Silva, appeared the Nicaraguan tyrant Anastasio Somoza ‘as a tutelary angel of the freedom of thought’ and placed as archetypes of democracy the Chilean Gonzalez Videla and the Bolivian dictators. Meanwhile, ‘it was shameful to see in that assembly of Montevideo the thug intellectuals of Rafael Leonidas Trujillo bellowing in the rostrum that Peron was a tyrant and that in his country, on the contrary, they enjoyed a complete freedom of thought,’ affirmed angrily the Venezuelan writer.

This book of Selser, quoted by journalist Jose Steinsleger, appears another testimony of denounce against the IAPA, coming from its own members. According to Selser, in 1958 one of the former IAPA presidents, the Mexican Miguel Lanz Duret (1909-1959), director of El Universal, quit the organization when he knew that the IAPA had requested to register as a corporation established in Dover, United States. With this action, in the opinion of Lanz Duret, ‘the IAPA would depend, to all legal effects, on the US laws, rejecting this way its alleged independence and discrediting in facts the advisable extraterritorial nature granted, for instance, by a mobile yearly host, different from the US.’

More recently, in 2000, a similar position had to be adopted by the Uruguayan journal La Republica and the Posdata magazine, which made public its resignation to the corporate organization after knowing that the former press director of the military dictatorship in that country (1973-1985), Danilo Arbilla, had been named president of the IAPA.

The letter of resignation to the IAPA, undersigned by the director of La Republica, Federico Fasano Mertens, and dated on October 24th 2000, claimed that naming Arbilla as president of an organization which had among its main declared objectives to defend the freedom of press constituted an insult to the democratic conscience of the American people. His appointment before the organism which intends to watch over the freedom of press is equivalent to designate the fox to take care of the hen-coop. Because of all the above-mentioned, the journal La Republica has the high honor of resigning, formal and publicly, as member of this Association while the impostor is at the front, concluded the letter.

My friends, the dictators

As the Cuban journalist Ernesto Vera says, media terrorism has plenty of expressions. Though the majority of times it expresses under the action of the IAPA and its members, not in a few occasions it is expressed in omission. The IAPA silences are equally eloquent, especially when those cover its alliances with dictatorial regimes.

In 2005, this denounced former president of the IAPA, Danilo Arbilla, acted against the government of then president Nestor Kirchner, to whom he charged of handling advertisement in a selective way and treating with lack of consideration the media. Kirchner then recalled Arbilla’s record and recalled as well to the vice chairman of the Argentinean journal La Nacion, Claudio Escribano, his indulgence to the atrocities committed in Argentina during the military dictatorship in that country.

That link of the great press’ owners with the Latin American dictatorial regimes has been documented enough and quoted in several occasions to prove that the IAPA concerns are not aimed to the defense of freedoms but to the preservation of corporate and oligarchic interests.

In Arbilla’s case, he had been press secretary during the last military dictatorship in Uruguay, in which Uruguayan citizens were tortured and murdered. According to the Uruguayan journal La Republica, Arbilla was designated for the post by president Juan Maria Bordaberry and continued holding it after the president eliminated the republican institutions with military support, and even after the dictatorship was fully established.

Thus, the journal recalls that Arbilla was also accessory of the presidential decree on June 27th 1973, which clearly banned the press of spreading any kind of information that direct or indirectly mentioned or referred to the issues stated on that decree, giving dictatorial purposes to the Administration or might disrupt the stillness and the order. Under his administration between 1973 and 1976, 173 media were closed ?4 of these closings were definitive?and it was seized the Uruguayan Association of Press (APU, for Spanish), the unionist organization of journalists. The undersecretary of the weekly magazine Marcha, Julio Castro, also disappeared and were imprisoned and tortured tens of journalists.

A similar character, Dominican German Orné–Ÿ, president of the IAPA Freedom of Press Committee, who with worry addressed letters to the Chilean president Salvador Allende due to fake infringement to the freedom of press. This same Orné–Ÿ was pointed by researchers of different nationalities for performing like a flatterer to the dictator in the Dominican Republic, Rafael Leonidas Trujillo.

Another example of the IAPA performance before dictatorships can be found on its denunciations in 1974, when according to the corporate organization the worst enemy of freedom of press in the continent was the Peruvian nationalist government of Juan Velasco Alvarado because of the measures of expropriation to the great press. Meanwhile, the brutal repression and gagging in the dictatorships of Chile, Argentina and Uruguay remained practically ignored by the lord of the press.

The IAPA blows

Parallel to its link with dictatorial governments, the history of the American great press cartel records a certain number of aggressions against the constitutionally constituted governments, in equal terms to the imperialist interests in the region. Thus, Garguverich stresses the soon conformation of an axis CIA, IAPA and agencies of news as part of the structure of US domination, making a powerful instrument for the destabilizing plans in Latin America [5].

Perhaps the most symbolic case of the destabilizing action of the IAPA has been the dirty campaign against the government of Salvador Allende in Chile, overthrown in 1973 due to the combination of Chilean reactionary forces and the CIA, since the implementation of a strong psychological war.

Chilean journalist Hernan Uribe affirms that along the whole history of Chile, there was no period in which dominated a freedom of information that even fell into debauchery and in clear violations to professional ethics as in Allende’s term in office. President Allende himself, in 1970, declared to Prensa Latina agency that his government would favor unlimited freedom of press, but would also favor that all the social agents and ideological trends had access to opinion.

Currently, those rights were officially established, but its practice appears restricted to the minor sectors which had a prominent situation from the financial point of view, expressed Allende, according the also journalist Ernesto Carmona. His words, obviously, would not please the media magnates. Even less when Allende pointed towards a main topic, indicating that the media in capitalist regimes turned not in instruments of information, but in instruments of misinformations of the people’s interests.

Oriented by the CIA, the Chilean opponent media, headed by the journal El Mercurio, could not answer Allende’s request of informing with objectivity and to maintain with nobility their points of view. On the contrary, they devoted to spread lies and to try to give an image of persecution to the press, adding fuel to the fire in which they would cook Pinochet’s dictatorship. For that reason, Allende claimed, on February 12th 1973, We are obliged to point out the lack of moral authority and the distorted interest of those who shelter on the Inter American Press Association. We are not concerned about the critics. We not only accept it, we also claim for it.

Uribe also stresses that it was also the CIA the responsible for directing the great Chilean press and the IAPA members in a campaign of black propaganda against Allende, fact proved by unclassified documents in the United States. On this context, the journal El Mercurio, property of Agustin Edwards, who performed as the IAPA vice president, received enough dollars for his campaign against Allende, and he even stopped circulating for a day, pleading threats ‘in order to form a misinformation scandal which claimed ‘for the closing’ of El Mercurio.’

In accordance with this Chilean journalist, the lies were in such a way that the campaign denounced that the press would be assaulted cutting the supply of paper, when the truth that the government had no relation with the business of the paper because the monopolistic producer of that instrument was a private company.

On the research carried out by Gargurevich is proved that this campaign of destabilization at the Chile of Allende included the deterioration on the image of the Unidad Popular (People’s Union) government, as internall as externally. That ‘external front’ was made by the journals members of the IAPA. The news were written by the CIA, spread by the great agencies and published by the IAPA members.

The IAPA got even to meet in Santiago de Chile on October 1972, meeting to which Allende did not rejected even though the opposition of different Chilean sectors, which foresaw the intentions of the organization. That meeting, in which was ‘defended the freedom of press’ again, had, of course, a wide media coverage.

The work of the IAPA and its members on the overthrowing of Guatemalan president Jacobo Arbenz, which occurred in 1954, has also been revealed by CIA documents, unclassified in 1999 and collected on the book The CIA in Uruguay, from the historian Roberto Garcia [6].

The historical research made by Garcia proves that the priorities in the advertising established by the CIA against Arbenz were immediately expressed by the right-wing press in Uruguay. Media as El Pa韘 and El Dia published editorials about the ‘communist infiltration’ made by the CIA, even with errors of the translation from the English language and barefacedly stressed by both journals with only one day of difference.

The proofs can be found in documents like CIA, Guatemala-General Plan of Action (Doc. N?135875, November 12th 1953), which establishes the essential contents of the continental misinformation plan against Arbenz; and ‘CIA, Hemisphere Support of Pbsuccess’ (Doc. N?913376, February 16th 1954), which described the support in the hemisphere for the misinformation plan.

All this operation was headed by the never missing IAPA denounce about the violations to the freedom of press in Guatemela. On its official publication Press of the Ameritas (N?25, Vol. 1, March 1st 1954), the IAPA supported its concerns on a press conference offered by Jules Dubois, president of the IAPA Freedom of Press Committee, after president Arbenz warned that the press was fostering a foreign intervention on his country.

Likewise, Gargurevich established on his research the similarities between the operation carried out to overthrow Allende in Chile with the campaign that achieved the defeat of the prime minister from Jamaica, Michael Manley, at the elections of October 1980, which were charged of fraudulent. Manley had been pointed by the United States as turning to communism ?with all it meant on the context of the Cold War ?after establishing the diplomatic relations with Cuba, joining the Non-Aligned Movement, raising the tax to transnational companies and declaring that his country was oriented towards a democratic socialism.

In this case, the role performed by El Mercurio in Chile was given to The Daily Gleaner, which in 1979 was charged by the Press Association in Jamaica of assuming a non professional behavior, and which savage campaign against Manley’s government was widely spread by the journals associated to the IAPA.

It is as well known the link CIA-great media against the Sandinista government in Nicaragua, denounced in 1981 by Nicaraguan journalists; and, in general, against the nationalist, socialist, progressive governments in the region which take measures that might affect the interests of the local and US oligarchies.

The black propaganda continues

After proving with success these schemes of black propaganda against democratic and people’s governments, the axis CIA-IAPA continues to apply it in Latin America. Its obvious use can be found in the case of Cuba; Argentina, with the administration of Nestor Kirchner and Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner; Bolivia, with Evo Morales administration; Ecuador, with president Rafael Correa; and Venezuela, with the Bolivarian Revolution boosted by President Hugo Chavez.

In 2005, the former IAPA president, Danillo Arbillo, denounced by his link with the Uruguayan dictatorship, charged against the government of president Nestor Kirchner, to whom he accused of handling publicity in a selective way’ and ‘treating with lack of consideration the media. Arbilla’s claim was directed to the disposition of the Argentinean government of distributing official advertisement with criteria of balance among the small, medium and great media.

Against Evo Morales, in 2006, the IAPA expressed that in Bolivia the freedom of press was in risk before the purpose of supporting the formation of a communitarian media network, even though these media constitute a tool for the democratization of communications, through the work of communities themselves.

Regarding Rafael Correa’s administration, the Ecuadorian journalist Alberto Maldonado has denounced that the IAPA describes president Correa as ‘hostile to the press’, just due to his expressions to qualify certain media and press representatives faced to accusations and expressions that those have used against him without any kind of tactfulness.

Regarding Venezuela, the IAPA has charged several accusations along the term in office of Hugo Ch醰ez, reiterating the model of black propaganda, according to which the freedom of expression would be at risk.

The case of the approval of the Law of Social Responsibility on Radio and Television ?Ley de Responsabilidad Social en Radio y Televisi髇, known as the LRS or the Ley Resorte ?in 2004, for instance, the IAPA, loyal to its precept saying that the best law of press is that which does not exists, affirmed that this legislation promoted previous censorship, when it just tried to promote the right of the people to a appropriate and truthful information. However, in April 2002, the IAPA backed the coup against the legal government of Venezuela and did not pronounce about the informative black out of the private TV stations on April 13th, nor about the closing of the state-owned Venezolana de Television during the brief de facto government.

On the other hand, the tie between the corporate press with the interests of the United States has been proved again, as it is remarked by Steinsleger, when on October 13th 2003, then counselor of national security Condoleezza Rice ordered the IAPA General Assembly through teleconference to support the government of Gonzalo Sanchez de Losada, which resignation was claimed by the Bolivian people after a high police repression.

The IAPA defends the old order

The Inter American Press Association has not only unleashed campaigns against legal governments, but it has also touched international organizations of the United Nations system itself which have joined to the Latin American nations in the struggle for the democratization of the communications. It happened on the seventies against the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), when it promoted the right of the States to establish communicational policies.

During that decade, the non-aligned countries began a lithe movement demanding the creation of a New International Economic Order (NIEO) to overcome the injustices of the order which prevailed until that moment. In joint with this NIEO, the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM), on its Statement of Algiers in 1974, proclaimed the necessity of a New World Information and Communication Order (NWICO), to contribute with the democratization of communications, using among other formulas, the definition of national policies of communication. The NAM denounced the informative system of the moment as an instrument for domination.

The United States’ answer to this proposal was immediate and it constituted a closed defense to the doctrine of free information flow[7], in which the IAPA acted again as its allied. To that doctrine, the so-called Third World countries opposed the demand of a balanced flow, through the restructuring of the information and communication systems, against the one-way messages and media concentration.

Denounces against that free flow found an allied on the report ‘Many voices, One world’, presented in 1980 as a result of the work made by a committee appointed by the UNESCO and chaired by Sean MacBride, Lenin Prize and Nobel Prize winner. In this document, known as the MacBride Report, were exposed the unbalance of information flow and was stated the necessity of more justice on the exchange of information, as well as less dependence in relation to the trends of communication.

The IAPA turned into one of the savagest opposition voices to the NWICO and to the implementation of national information policies (NIP), under a reactionary attitude against any possibility of democratization of communication, which would logically attempt against the interests of the powerful media groups.

The major argument they presented on their offensive against the NWICO was the most trite of the whole Cold War era: that new order smelled to communist conspiracy and was promoted by the Soviet Union.

In order to stop any governmental action favoring the democratization of communications, the IAPA joined to the other employer’s organization of the region: the Inter American Association of Radio Broadcasting (Asociacion interamericana de radiodifusion, AIR). Both of them also attacked in another front by discrediting UNESCO’s action, organization which under the direction of the Senegalese Amadou M’Bow had decided to boost the NWICO, establishing links between communication and development. The pestering against the UNESCO did not cease until the United States and England announced their resignation to the organization, denouncing the politicization of this forum; then the Spaniard Federico Mayor Zaragoza was appointed, a character considered much more docile before the dominant interests. For that reason, the Venezuelan researcher Oswaldo Capriles concluded:

”The punishment suffered by the UNESCO is one of the major lessons to be learned regarding the terrible force that the organizations of western agencies and news media have, especially from the United States, not only regarding the specific capacity to influence the opinion through the twisting of information, but also regarding the capacity of pressing directly the governments and obtaining serious political results in the scene of the organizations of the United Nations international system” (1996, p. 42).

Those in charge for this campaign were mainly The New York Times, agencies of news AP, UPI and AFP, and specially the IAPA and AIR.

The IAPA action was particularly string in 1976 against the Conference of San Jose de Costa Rica, where the Latin American governments met to debate about the national policies of communication. The IAPA, as it did not request the status of observer before the UNESCO, was not invited to the meeting; however, the employer’s organization put forward a campaign affirming that when they did not invite it they rejected the debate and, under a flourish strike, announced a parallel meeting in San Jose, under the loud-voiced direction of a Dominican journalist, former spokesperson of the deceased dictator Trujillo, as Capriles indicated.

In a detailed analysis of the IAPA and AIR campaign against the UNESCO, Capriles expressed that both employer’s organizations achieved to flood the world press with a war of opinions in which dominated the idea of existing an ‘UNESCO thesis’, inspired by the ‘extreme left’ and attempting against the freedom of expression. Besides, the attacks were focused against those countries which supported the conference, while in the great media reduced the negative news about the countries which showed disposition to collaborate.

The communiques issued by the UNESCO were not published by almost any journal, while any document issued by the denominated Commission for the Defense of Freedom of Information, created by the IAPA and by the International Press Institute (IPI) as one of its battle fronts, was repeated by all the affiliated media. The IAPA campaign was repeated in the United States by the journals of the group Hearts and the New York Times[8]. Meanwhile, from the IAPA Newscast they mixed up non related events, accusations of anti-Semitism, denounces of actions of the Russian crusher-Third World to attack the UNESCO.

Despite one of the strategies used by the IAPA was to insisting on an alleged plot against the freedom of expression drawn by the governments of extreme right and extreme left, the truth is as Capriles reveals:

On the countries with dictatorial regimes existed in fact an unspoken agreement between governments and media upon the basis of previous situations of understanding, which proves that besides the commercial media were not demanding democracy or freedom, but defending the oligopolistic privileges for their advertising activities, an activity they considered instead as threat by those countries under formal democracy regimes because on those ?at least in some of them ?had been stated the issue of communication policies as necessary element to progress or improvement of the democracy. (Capriles, 1996, p. 57)

Some of the agreements of that meeting in Costa Rica consisted on creating a Latin American and Caribbean agency of news, establish ways of cooperation for the development of rural communications, forming a Latin American council of social communication, demanding a balanced circulation of communication and information at the international level, and recognizing the right pf communication as a derivation from the universal right of expression. However, all of those purposes were abandoned by the governments before the strong media pressure.

Specifically in Venezuela, the IAPA found support on the employer’s federation Fedecamaras, which on August 3rd launched a declaration about the necessity of protecting the freedom of expression and warning against the totalitarian risk.

Since then until now, the IAPA has kept acting against the attempts of vindication of the right of communication and truthful information. For that reason, by the end of the nineties, it accused the government of Rafael Caldera of having totalitarian trends, seeking to hinder him to present his proposal of right o truthful information at the VII Ibero-American Summit, which took place on the island of Margarita in 1997.

In that summit, despite the violent opposition of the IAPA, was approved for the first time a paragraph about granting the right to truthful information, on the accord 38 of that conference, which is still in force. This principle then found firmer paths on the Constitution of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, which confirms in article 58 the right of appropriate, truthful and unbiased information.

IAPA’s speech. Freedom of press or freedom of company?

The IAPA, in its official speech, tries very hard to use concepts to legitimate its behavior and set itself as a referent to define the freedom of press and to decide who respects it and who does not. However, doing so, it is usurping a collective right of the peoples and hiding on behalf of whom this employers’ organization is really acting. Let’s see some examples:

The IAPA tries to appear as the representatives of the journalists, but as people have noticed, it is just an employer’s organization that represents only mass media owners. Therefore, it cannot talk on behalf of the journalists, as it has been denounced by journalists of the whole continent.

The IAPA claims for itself the right to decide who is violating and who is respecting the freedom of speech. As the journalist Ernesto Vera warns, the freedom of speech is an individual right, and the freedom of press comes from it; nevertheless, in mass media’s case, freedom of press becomes into a collective right. Thus, it is a right of the society and does not belong to
the big press owners. If we let this right in their hands would be as if we trust the right of health to be defended and defined only by the big private hospitals’ owners.

Oswaldo Capriles, in his book ‘Poder pol韙ico y comunicaci髇’ (Political Power and Communication), points out that the IAPA uses the freedom of speech to put pressure on public opinion. In the moment that this organization shows itself as the people in charge of defining what countries respect the freedom of press and which ones do not, they put pressure on governments and present themselves to the public opinion with a power they do not have. He also reminds us that the IAPA offers the dominant conception of freedom of speech as an exclusive privilege of media owners.

Who has more right to the freedom of expression than the society itself? For this reason the IAPA is frequently denounced. They pretend to mix together the freedom of press with the freedom of company, which is nothing more than to defend their capability of making business, as it is defined by the Latin American Federation of Journalists (FELAP, Spanish abbreviation):

‘Being this society (the IAPA) a congregation of newspapers’ owners and editors, the freedom of speech that it pretends to defend cannot be other than the freedom of company needed by its members in order to take part in the press business and to use news as a merchandise or a consumption product’ (2006, p. 28).

The IAPA tries to define, without the participation of the rest of the society, the freedom of expression, which is a right that has not been granted to it and that the organization has take over thanks to its economic power. The IAPA made it clear in its Declaration of Chapultepec, in which expresses an apology of a freedom of press’ definition that seeks a prerogative of the mass media. The employers’ organization started the Chapultepec project in 1994 and, currently, it assures that the ten points of the Declaration have been established as the ‘recognized standard for the hemisphere to measure the freedom of expression and press’. In fact, it assures that since 1994, an ‘abstract concept’, as it is the freedom of expression, has been redefined, which has allowed people not to give unclear, sporadic, and incoherent answers, when they are questioned about freedom of expression’s meaning.

The IAPA presents itself as the defender of the independent press. After seeing so many examples of manipulation and misinformation, people should ask themselves, what is that press independent of? It is independent of the people’s interests; dependent of money and power owners.

The IAPA is harshly against the truthful information concept, alleging that if it were accepted, then media would have to account for to the governments, which in turn could censure press defining what truthful information is. This is a false dichotomy, because the society is in charge of denouncing mass media when they lie. The dilemma is not IAPA vs. Government, but IAPA vs. Society.

The IAPA has been always against laws on press, defending instead the self-regulation concept. Nevertheless, if somebody has enough money to own a mass media that would reach hundred of thousands or millions of people that does not place this person above or at the margin of the society. He or she has to answer and assume an ethic and social responsibility, or we would be facing a paradox of an antidemocratic power acting as the comptroller of another power, which is democratically constituted, without accounting for to the latter and without any chance of being modified.

We should have to remember, as Vera does, that the press’ existence is supported in constitutional precepts that were not bought with money, but with the sacrifice and blood of all of those who fought for the independence.

Powerful, but not almighty

Despite of this imperialist alliances, manipulations, and misinformation record, for the past few years, Latin American progressive governments, left-wing or revolutionary ones, have achieved their victories in their electoral processes, even against the will and position of big press media, which represents a major defeat for the powerful people of the IAPA. This evidences, undoubtedly, a growth of the critical people’s conscience, even when black propaganda campaigns keep harming and trying to bend people’s will of advancing to the transformation of our realities.

Ernesto Vera defends the idea, after having several years exercising in the journalism field, that the owners of the mass media companies are powerful, but not almighty. And their weak point is precisely that their message offends human intelligence and it is not identified with the reality of the huge majority of the addressees. For that reason, even with less technological and financial resources, it is needed to insist on the task of developing a critical conscience about what those media mean and about who their owners are, and who are the owners of those owners.

[1] The informations and opinions issued by the Cuban journalist Ernesto Vera came from a personal interview carried out for this paper. Vera is honorary president of the Latin American Federation of Journalists (Federaci髇 Latinoamericana de Periodistas, FELAP) and professor at the Jose Marti International Institute of Journalism.

[2] In 1950, the IAPA had a total 778 members, 424 were from the United States, 314 were Latin Americans and 22 were from Canada and Europe.

[3] The answer to this call came 25 years later because it was in 1976 when the Latin American Federation of Journalists (FELAP) was created, under the principle of always supporting the right of the people to trustworthy information. To found the FELAP it was essential the fighting action of the Peruvian journalist Genaro Carnero Checa, who achieved that then Mexican president Luis Echeverria supported the beginning of the organization. Nowadays, the FELAP actions and declarations continue to be silenced by the great media.

[4] The quotes about Selser’s book are collected by journalist Jose Steinsleger, in the article ‘SIP: Mordaza de libre presi髇’ (IAPA, Gag of free pressure), published by the Mexican journal La Jornada on October 15th 2006. About this matter of the IAPA, Selser is also frequently quoted by Juan Gargurevich. Steinsleger comments that if the IAPA were an organization really committed to freedom, independence and democracy, the building working as head office in Miami should be called Gregorio Selser (1922-1991), instead of Jules Dubois.

[5] Venezuelan researcher Oswaldo Capriles, in a book titled ‘Poder pol韙ico y comunicacion’ (Political power and communication), states that there is no doubt that the US agencies of security have been involved on the conformation of the IAPA, even though the owners of the media do not need much pressure to maintain similar positions with the US industrial-political-military complex, given to its place into the dominant elites. It explains the ultraconservative trend granted by the IAPA.

[6] The notes about Garc韆’s book were published on the Uruguayan journal La Republica, on August 20th 2007, titled ‘La CIA ordenaba; El Pa韘 y la SIP ejecutaban’ (The CIA ordered; El Pa韘 and the IAPA carried it out). The note of the journal recalls that Arbenz headed the second term in office of what was called the ‘democratic spring’ in Guatemala and he was overthrown on June 27th 1954 due to an invasion of ‘a liberator army’ organized, financed and armed by the United States. ‘The CIA operation to overthrow Arbenz was called a ‘Success’ and it was the first which included the implementation of ‘an instrument to construct opinions at a continental level’, in accordance with the definition by the US itself. The operation was authorized by the US president Dwigth Eisenhower and carried out by the then minister John Foster Dulles and his brother Allen, CIA director. Dulles’ brothers were shareholders of the United Fruit Company, owner of huge large states and plantations in Guatemala, affected by the agricultural reform started by Arbenz in order to give lands to the thousands of peasants ans natives deprived from it.’

[7] At the Inter American Conference of Chapultepec, carried out in 1945, the United States had fostered the approval of a resolution regarding the free circulation of news. As the Venezuelan journalist Eleazar Diaz Rangel, in his book International Information in Latin America, these resolutions might be literally unquestionable, but in the practice ‘would only benefit the single country capable to make circulate all kind of communicational messages, aware of the power of information.’ One year later, in 1946, the Department of State informed that an undersecretary of State would be in charge of the communication issues, on the express function of breaking the barriers opposing to the expansion of the US media on the planet, assuming the freedom of press as part of the US foreign policy.

[8] The reporter of the New York times, Deidre Carmody, stated the IAPA arguments and complained about the impossibility of presenting the UNESCO pleas affirming that it had not been possible to get in touch with any of its officials at the Costa Rica conference; however, it was later discovered that she was not only accredited as correspondent for the event, but she was neither in San Jose.

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Vatican updates its thou-shalt-not list

Thursday, March 20th, 2008

By FRANCES D’EMILIO

The Associated Press

VATICAN CITY — In olden days, the deadly sins included lust, gluttony and greed. Now, the Catholic Church says pollution, mind-damaging drugs and genetic experiments are on its updated thou-shalt-not list.

Also receiving fresh attention by the Vatican was social injustice, along the lines of the age-old maxim: “The rich get richer while the poor get poorer.”

In the Vatican’s latest update on how God’s law is being violated in today’s world, Monsignor Gianfranco Girotti, the head of the Apostolic Penitentiary, was asked by the Vatican newspaper L’Osservatore Romano what, in his opinion, are the “new sins.”

He cited “violations of the basic rights of human nature” through genetic manipulation, drugs that “weaken the mind and cloud intelligence” and the imbalance between the rich and the poor.

“If yesterday sin had a rather individualistic dimension, today it has a weight, a resonance, that’s especially social, rather than individual,” said Girotti, whose office deals with matters of conscience and grants absolution.

It’s not the first time that the Vatican has sought to put a modern spin on sin. Last year, the Vatican took on the problem of highway accidents, issuing a kind of “Ten Commandments” for drivers against the sins of road rage, alcohol abuse and even rudeness behind the wheel.

Vatican officials, however, stressed that Girotti’s comments broke no new ground on what constitutes sin.

On the environment, both Pope Benedict XVI and the late Pope John Paul II frequently expressed concern about the fate of the Earth. During Benedict’s papacy, Vatican engineers have developed plans for some Holy See buildings to use solar energy, including photovoltaic cells on the roof of the auditorium for pilgrims’ audiences with the pontiff.

John Paul also dedicated much of his long papacy to condemning the gap between have and have-nots in speeches in his travels throughout the world as well as in writings.

“The poor are always becoming poorer and the rich ever more rich, feeding unsustainable social injustice,” Girotti said in the interview published Sunday.

Closer to home, Girotti was asked about the many “situations of scandal and sin within the church,” in what appeared to be a reference to allegations in the United States and other countries of sexual abuse by clergy of minors and the coverups by hierarchy.

The monsignor acknowledged the “objective gravity” of the allegations, but contended that the heavy coverage by mass media of the scandals must also be denounced because it “discredits the church.”

Benedict has been leading the Vatican’s campaign against abortion, and Girotti was asked about the “widespread perception” that the church doesn’t consider the “difficult” predicament for women.

Girotti rejected that view, saying that Catholic organizations help unwed mothers, educating “their children who come into the worth because of their lack of foresight” and facilitating adoption.

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Guantanamo: The Bigger Picture

Tuesday, March 18th, 2008

by Frida Berrigan

(Foreign Policy in Focus)The U.S. base at Guantanamo has been called many things. The ?a href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2005/may/26/usa.guantanamo”>gulag of our time?(Amnesty International General Secretary Irene Khan, May 2005). he key strategic intelligence platform in the war on terror?(Charles Stimson, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Detainee Affairs, January 2007). The ?a href=”http://www.humanrightsfirst.org/us_law/op_ed/posner_speech_0403.htm”>legal equivalent of outer space?(unnamed Administration official). The right place for ?a href=”http://www.whitehouse.gov/vicepresident/news-speeches/speeches/vp20020127-1.html”>the worst of a very bad lot?(Vice President Dick Cheney, January 2002) and for the ?a href=”http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2006-12-15-gitmo-freed_x.htm”>most dangerous, best trained, vicious killers on the face of the earth?(former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, January 2002).

Guantanamo is now best known as the home of oversized iguanas, banana rats, and the more than 700 揺nemy combatants?who have been detained,

tortured, and interrogated there over the past six years as part of the

Bush administration global war on terrorism. But, the history of the

U.S. Naval Base at Guantanamo Bay stretches much further back ?to the

beginning of the last century ?when the United States wrestled this

prime real-estate from Spain to become the colonial power in the hemisphere.

Twenty-first century experiences at Guantanamo have now been exposed in a sheaf of books, including difficult, vivid memoirs from former detainees and powerful poetry, and dramatized in plays and films, such as the best-documentary Oscar winner Taxi to the Dark Side and the critically-acclaimed Road to Guantanamo. The iconic orange jumpsuits are on display at every anti-war protest

and the word 揋uantanamo?is often used as shorthand for the Bush

administration whole system of indefinite detention, rendition,

torture, and abuse of power established since September 2001.

Harold and Kumar Escape Guantanamo

Calls to hut down Guantanamo?from legal and human rights experts, politicians, and the international community

are now strong, irrepressible and growing louder each day. At the same

time, the facility has finally penetrated pop culture. This spring,

movie-goers can enjoy the sequel of the 2004 slacker-stoner Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle.

In the new film, the two friends are arrested after smuggling a bong on

a flight to Amsterdam and end up at Guantanamo. Yep, the movie is titled: Harold and Kumar II: Escape from Guantanamo Bay. Promoted with the tag-line: his Time, They抮e Running from

the Joint,?the film is described as n irreverent and epic journey of

deep thoughts, deeper inhaling and a wild trip around the world that is

as 憉n-PC?as it gets.?/p>

Guantanamo is getting more attention (both outraged and outrageous),

but the question of how the United States came to control a swath of

Cuban territory is worth more discussion. If the Guantanamo prison is

shuttered tomorrow, and the prisoners get their day in court, the U.S.

base will continue to exist as a key colonial outpost in a

post-colonial world. Now that Fidel Castro has turned over power to his

brother Raul and the United States is again poised to emocratize?
socialist Cuba, this question has even greater resonance.

Booty from a 揝plendid Little War?/h3>

Perched on the south-eastern corner of Cuba, the U.S. Naval Base

straddles the deep water harbor of Guantanamo Bay and occupies 45

square miles of Cuban territory.

In 1898, the United States and Spain battled for control of Cuba and

other Spanish colonies in what Washington had come to see as part of

its phere of influence.?The Spanish-American War is known for the

Rough Riders and the 揜emember the Maine?call to arms (which refers to

the now historically suspect attack on the USS Maine battleship sunk in

the Havana Harbor). In a letter to his good friend Teddy Roosevelt, the

U.S. Ambassador to England dubbed it a plendid little war.?Ignoring

the countless (literally)

Cubans, Filipinos and others who were killed, one could see his point.

The United States won a lot in the war: it lasted less than four

months, resulted in the death of fewer than 1,000 U.S. soldiers and put

the United States in charge of Puerto Rico, the Philippines and Guam ?all former Spanish colonies ?and gave the United States control of Hawaii. The U.S. Navy also discovered the benefits of Guantamo Bay when they sought refuge from summer hurricanes. One hundred and ten years later, they are still there.

While the U.S. Congress promised Cuba independence after the war, the Platt Amendment

forced a peace treaty that granted the United States the right to

tabilize?the island militarily and established a permanent U.S.

naval base in Cuba.

Cuban-American Treaty

The Cuban-American Treaty

was signed in 1903 by President Theodore Roosevelt and Tomas Estrada

Palma, the President of Cuba ?a U.S. citizen fully backed by

Washington. According to the text of the treaty,

the U.S. military presence will 揺nable the United States to maintain

the independence of Cuba, and to protect the people thereof, as well as

for its own defense, the Cuban Government will sell or lease to the

United States the lands necessary for coaling or naval stations.?The

treaty goes onto acknowledge Cuba 搖ltimate sovereignty?over the

territory, but asserts that while the United States occupies it, they

have 揷omplete jurisdiction and control?over the land.

It difficult to call an agreement between a world power and a

conquered colony a treaty, but it has governed operations there ever

since. Only a few restrictions were placed on U.S. freedom of

operation, even when the treaty was updated in 1934. The document

stipulated that the site could only be used for the purposes outlined

and prohibited the U.S. from conducting private enterprise there. The

U.S. granted Cuba and her trading partners free access through the bay

and agreed to pay Havana $2,000 in gold per year. Finally, the two

countries promised to return fugitives from justice who crossed into

the others?territory.

As U.S. Navy Rear Admiral M.E. Murphy, a military historian, put it in his 1953 History of Guantanamo Bay:

the land is bit of American territory, and so it will probably

remain as long as we have a Navy.?He goes on to note e have a lease

in perpetuity to this Naval reservation and it is inconceivable that we

would abandon it.?/p>

And we have not abandoned it.

After the Revolution

When Washington close ally Fulgencio Batista was overthrown by the

Cuban Revolution in 1958, the relationship between the U.S. base and

the nation it occupied changed dramatically. When Batista fled to Spain

(where he lived the rest of his life in luxury), thousands of Cubans

with ties to his regime sought refuge on the base, and the rest of the

island was deemed off limits to U.S. servicemen and civilians in 1959.

Washington cut diplomatic relations in 1961.

In February 1964, two years after the Cuban missile crisis, Cuban

President Fidel Castro cut water and supply lines to the base and since

then, the U.S. Naval Base at Guantanamo Bay has been self-sufficient.

It is outfitted with a de-salinization plant to produce water, and

windmills and other technology produce all of the base electricity.

In 2002, the first 揺nemy combatants?in the global war on terrorism

landed at the Base. But this was not the first time the U.S. had

confined internationals at the base. In the early 1990s, civil unrest

in Haiti and economic crisis in Cuba drove tens of thousands of people

from both countries to seek refuge in the United States. In little

boats overcrowded with migrants, these people set off from the United

States ?only to end up at Guantanamo Bay.

As many as 45,000 migrants were rocessed?through the base, with many

of the Haitians sent home to deprivation and the majority of the Cubans

granted asylum.

揌onor Bound to Defend Freedom?/h3>

揌onor Bound to Defend Freedom?strong> is the proud sentiment emblazoned above the entrance to the U.S. Naval Base at Guantanamo. The website

for the Commander of Navy Installations Command Guantanamo features a

large picture of an iguana and the greeting: elcome to the website

for the oldest overseas U.S. Naval Station and the only one in a

country with which the U.S. does not maintain diplomatic relations.?/p>

Navy Commander Jeffery D. Gordon explains that the U.S. presence at

Guantanamo serves vital role in Caribbean regional security,

protection from narco-trafficking and terrorism and safeguards against

mass migration attempts in unseaworthy craft.?The Navy Atlantic

fleet is based there and the base is described as being 搊n the front

lines of the battle for regional security.?/p>

Changing the Rationale

The military aggressively makes the case for the base. Eighty years

ago, Guantanamo was crucial to colonial expansion and the smooth

extraction of resources from Latin America; 30 years ago, it would have

been justified as playing a key role in supporting anti-democratic

regimes in El Salvador, Nicaragua, and elsewhere. More recently, the

war on drugs served as rationale.

But, before 2001, the number of military personnel stationed at the base had dwindled to about 300. And many saw Guantanamo greatest value as a carrot to dangle before the Cuban people in Washington long project to unseat Fidel Castro. Part of the 1996 Helms Burton Act

(the chief aim of which was to strengthen and continue to U.S. trade

related embargo on Cuba) ?for example ?offered to open negotiations

with a emocratically elected Cuban government?to return the base at

Guantanamo to Cuba or redefine the lease.

Then, Washington decided that the Guantanamo base would be an ideal

place to try and hide war on terrorism detainees from the law and

public scrutiny. And planeloads of shackled prisoners wearing

blacked-out goggles, noise canceling headphones, and orange jumpsuits

began landing at the U.S. base. Initially, many were housed in

chain-link cages. In June 2005, then-Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld

told reporters that the Pentagon had invested $100 million

to construct new prisons and barracks and upgrade other facilities.

Operating the base and the prison cost another $95 million a year. For

U.S. soldiers and Marines stationed there, Guantanamo is a slice of the

American mall culture transported to coastal Cuba ?there is a weekly

newspaper, The Guantanamo Bay Gazette, a movie theater that

offers current films like 揑 Am Legend?and he Spiderwick

Chronicles.?McDonalds and Starbucks are both on base.

With no end in sight to the global war on terrorism, more than 8,000

military personnel are now based at Guantanamo. So, for the time being,

the military has a new way to fend off calls to shut down the U.S.

military base there. In a January 2007 interview on C-SPAN, Charles

Stimson, the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Detainee

Affairs, justified the U.S. base at Guantanamo, saying 揑t is important during time of war

to have a place where, number one, you can take people off the

battlefield and not allow them to go back to the battlefield, but also,

exploit intelligence that they may possess?Guantanamo today remains

the key strategic intelligence platform in the war on terror.?/p>

o my knowledge, the Cubans have never officially asked for it

back?John Regan, the acting Officer at the State Department Cuba

Desk, is quoted as saying in an April 2007 Los Angeles Times

article. He goes on to say that they have not raised objections to the

presence of war on terrorism prisoners. He must not be listening very

closely.

In June 2002, at the United Nations General Assembly, Cuba demanded that the Guantamo territory be returned to the island. And two years later, Cuba

Foreign Minister Felipe Perez Roque proposed a resolution before the

United Nations Human Rights Commission that would have condemned the

violation of human rights at Guantanamo. More recently, these calls

have grown louder. In a December 2007 speech in Havana, Roque said: ?/strong>We

demand today, on the World Day of Human Rights, that the President of

the United States and that the U.S. Government close down the torture

center in Guantamo and return to our homeland the territory that they

occupy illegally.?Cuba protests in other ways as well. The U.S.

Treasury continues to pay the 揼old?that Roosevelt promised 105 years

ago. Annual checks for $4,085 are deposited into an account for the

Cuban government, but not a single one has been cashed in 47 years.

Toxic Brand

Cuba doesn like Guantanamo, and many in the administration agree

that the detention facility has become a problem. During Robert Gates?
first week as Secretary of Defense following the resignation of Donald

Rumsfeld, he argued that the detention facility should be closed,

pointing out that the U.S. image abroad is so tainted that any legal

proceedings for detainees at the base will be viewed as illegitimate.

He commented: 揑 think that Guantanamo has become symbolic,

whether we like it or not, for many around the world.?He also cut one

big zero off Rumsfeld plan to spend $100 million on new

infrastructure, resulting in a more modest (but still significant) $10

million expenditure for air-conditioned pods and other amenities for

the military commissions hearings.

President George W. Bush acknowledges Guantanamo as a problem too, saying during a June 2006 press conference:

揑抎 like to close Guantanamo. No question: Guantanamo sends a signal

to some of our friends and provides an excuse ?for example, to say the

United States is not upholding the values that they抮e trying to

encourage other countries to adhere to.?Despite his claims to being

the ecider in chief,?Bush has not taken any executive steps to

change the signal we are sending.

What is at the heart of the administration discomfort with Guantanamo? It is not torture ?President Bush just vetoed a law

that would have prohibited water-boarding. It is certainly not respect

for Cuba sovereignty ?the State Department has a whole office

devoted to meddling in the country affairs. It is the PR problem. In

March of last year, William Taft, a former State Department adviser,

testified before the House of Representatives on Guantanamo. He

acknowledged that the logistical advantages of housing prisoners at

Guantanamo are outweighed by the olitical costs of continuing its

operation. At some point a brand becomes so toxic that no amount of Madison Avenue talent can rehabilitate it.?/p>

One solution is to give the base back to Cuba. But, Julia Sweig,

the Director for Latin America Studies at the Council on Foreign

Relations, is not sure Havana would want it back, saying 搃t become

such a global symbol of what has gone wrong with America ?not just a

symbol of our colonial impulses, but of the anti-imperialist fight

throughout Latin America ?it is something Cuba uses to greater benefit

than getting the base back.?Rhetorical benefits are of value ?but you

can eat, trade or wield geo-political power with rhetoric.

What Next?

But closing the prison and relinquishing control of the territory are two completely different things. Can Cuba get Guantanamo Bay back?

The Guantanamo prison is not a hot-button campaign issue. Lee

Feinstein, Director of National Security for Senator Hillary Clinton

campaign, says that s President, she would direct the Justice

Department to evaluate the evidence amassed against these prisoners and

make a determination.?Not exactly a rousing and definitive call to

shut down Guantanamo, but at least she has a process. For his part,

Senator Barack Obama does not see the need for military justice

proceedings there, asserting 揑 believe that our civilian courts or our

traditional system of military courts-martial are best able to meet

this challenge and demonstrate our commitment to the rule of law.?On

the Republican side, Senator John McCain has pushed for Guantanamo to

be closed and the prisoners sent to maximum security prison in Ft.

Leavenworth, Kentucky.

On the larger issue of U.S.-Cuba relations, Obama favors engagement

and dialogue without preconditions, while Clinton would predicate

diplomatic overtures on Cuba steps towards democratization. McCain

holds the position that U.S. containment policy has worked, and he

would not talk to Cuba until they held free elections and released

political prisoners and made other reforms.

Returning the occupied territory to Cuba has not been mentioned as

an option by Presidential candidates, and it is not high on the list of

objectives in Cuba policy circles. Close Cuba-watcher Patrick Doherty ?
the Deputy Director of the New America Foundation American Strategy Program

?predicts it would come up only in he later stages of a long-term

process of rapprochement.?That because, in addition to the

geographic value of an American military base at Guantanamo, Doherty

says 搊ne of our most effective areas of quiet cooperation with the

Cuban government is at the mil-mil level in managing our presence and

operations out of Guantanamo?and working on counter narcotics,

counter-crime, and general Caribbean security issues. Without many

other vehicles for official dialogue, Guantanamo, ironically, is acting

like a confidence-building measure.?/p>

Some international law experts assert that the United States is in

violation of the treaty made with Cuba and that could be the basis of a

movement to win the territory back. Dr. Alfredo de Zayas,

a professor of international law at the Geneva School for Diplomacy,

argues that even before looking at specific violations, the treaty can

be nullified because, he lease for the military base in a foreign

country is conditioned on the friendly relations between states.?While

relations between Cuba and the United States were friendly at the time

of the treaty, that is no longer the case. De Zayas also asserts that

the treaty is 搗oidable by virtue of a material breach,?because it

clearly stipulates that the area should be used for naval purposes

(coaling refers to re-fueling naval vessels when they were steam

powered) and 揻or no other purpose?including housing war on terrorism

detainees. Additionally, the treaty bars the United States from

establishing 揷ommercial, industrial or other enterprises?but the base

is home to McDonalds, Starbucks, Subway sandwiches, and other

commercial enterprises, another material breach.

While Washington does not make a habit of abiding by the treaty or

its obligations under it, the 1903 agreement was repeatedly cited as a

reason to keep Guantanamo detainees and their cases out of U.S. courts.

During Supreme Court hearings for Rasul vs. Bush and Al Odah vs. United States,

government lawyers argued that under the 1903 treaty and the 1934

revisions, the United States 搑ecognizes the continuance of the

ultimate sovereignty?of Cuba over Guantanamo and tha