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#3681: Re: #3505: Pina provides background to assertion on press reporting (fwd)
From: kevin pina <cariborganics@hotmail.com>
I was finally able to source some material that answers the question of US
news coverage following the coup. Aristide's credibility was a central
question being raised while the slaughter of innocents was seriously under
reported.
Excerpted from:
Democracy Enhancement
Noam Chomsky
Part II: The Case of Haiti
Z Magazine, July/August 1994
3. After the Coup
Wilentz reports further that immediately after the September 30 coup, the
State Department apparently "circulated a thick notebook filled with alleged
human rights violations" under Aristide -- "something it had not done under
the previous rulers, Duvalierists and military men," who were deemed proper
recipients
for aid, including military aid, "based on unsubstantiated human-rights
improvements." Toronto Star reporter Linda Diebel adds details. A "thick,
bound dossier" on Aristide's alleged crimes was presented by the coup
leader, General Cedras, to OAS negotiators. On October 3, U.S. Ambassador
Alvin Adams summoned reporters from the New York Times, Washington Post, and
other major U.S. journals to private meetings where he briefed them on these
alleged crimes, reportedly presenting them with the "dossier" -- which, we
may learn some day, was compiled by U.S. intelligence and provided to its
favorite generals. The Ambassador and his helpers began leaking the tales
that have been used since to demonstrate Aristide's meager democratic
credentials and his psychological disorders.13
The approved version is reflected by coverage of human rights abuses after
the coup. As shown in a study by Boston Media Action, while the military
were rampaging, the press focussed on abuses attributed to Aristide
supporters, less than 1% of the total but the topic of 60% of the coverage
in major journals during the two weeks following the coup, and over half of
coverage in the New York Times through mid-1992. During the two-week period
after the coup, Catherine Orenstein reports, the Times "spent over three
times as many column inches discussing Aristide's alleged transgressions
[as] it spent
reporting on the ongoing military repression. Mass murders, executions, and
tortures that were reported in human rights publications earned less than 4%
of the space that the Times devoted to Haiti in those weeks." A week after
the coup, the Washington Post accused Aristide of having organized his
followers into "an instrument of real terror," ignoring the 75% reduction in
human rights abuses during his term reported by human rights groups.14
13 Diebel, Star, Oct. 10, 1991; Nov. 14, 1993.
14 Boston Media Action report, distributed by Haiti Communications Project
(Cambridge); Z magazine, March 1993. Orenstein, NACLA Report on the
Americas, July/August 1993.
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