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Hidden headlines What the media missed: The Top 10 Censored Stories of 1999.
by
Carrie Ching,
Tate Hausman,
Don Hazen
and Tamara Straus 1
Energy Companies Support
Brutal Dictatorships and Human Rights Violations Arvind Ganesan, a researcher at Human Rights Watch, gives an overview of the egregious human rights violations that have occurred when oil and electricity corporations support strong-arm governments in developing nations. In some ways, its the oldest story of the list: multinational corporations bulldozing over poor Third World populations to extract valuable natural resources. But the details in this story are so striking campaigns of rape, torture and slavery that benefited Unocal in Burma, mass graves dug in Indonesia with Mobils bulldozers, scores of citizens slaughtered in Chad and Cameroon by forces aligned with Exxon, unarmed villagers in Nigeria shot down by soldiers in Chevron helicopters that they should have merited significant media coverage. The coverage they got was solid but only in Europe, Asia, Africa and energy trade publications. The U.S. media picked up a report here and there, but never connected the dots or explained the storys context. According to Ganesan, "the failure of the U.S. mainstream media on this issue is glaring." Rather than overt censorship, Ganesan said, it was a combination of cutbacks in international news, the deterioration of investigative reporting, a very complex situation to report on and a lack of reader interest that killed the story. "Theres no nefarious motive behind the lack of coverage," he said. However, Ganesan expressed concern that poor coverage in the United States has had negative ramifications. "Because the European press has investigated these issues and raised public awareness, corporations like BP (based in England) and Shell (based in Holland) have taken significant steps to correct these human rights violations. But companies based in America are lagging behind their European counterparts because they face so little public scrutiny." 2
Drug Companies Put Profits Before Health Instead of developing cures for life-threatening though preventable Third World diseases, multinational pharmaceutical companies are focusing their research on "lifestyle drugs" such as Viagra that bring in billions of dollars in earnings. Ken Silverstein reported that in 1998 death from malaria, tuberculosis and acute lower-respiratory infections claimed 6.1 million lives nearly three times the number of people who died from AIDS. These people died not because drugs could not be created to combat new strains of these diseases, but because, asserts Silverstein, "it doesnt pay to keep them alive." Meanwhile, in its first year Viagra earned more than $1 billion. Propecia and Rogaine anti-balding drugs earned $180 million in 1998. To discover other golden mines like these, enormous research funds are being poured into creating anti-wrinkle creams and drugs aimed at curing dysfunctional pets. "Its obvious that some of the industrys surplus profits could be going into research for tropical diseases," Silverstein quoted a retired drug company executive as saying. "Instead its going to stockholders." 3
Bloated American Cancer Society Wastes Much, Prevents Few Cancers In what has become his raison dêtre, Dr. Samuel Epstein argued that the American Cancer Society (ACS) should redirect its vast resources toward preventing cancer rather than treating it. ACS doesnt do so because many of its influential members benefit financially from treating the disease. Epstein has been crusading against the ACS and the National Cancer Institute (NCI), the two largest organizations devoted to fighting cancer, for decades. As early as 1977, Epstein was writing books and articles blasting these two institutions as reactionary forces that profit from the "cancer epidemic" and have "incestuous conflicts of interest" with the pharmaceutical and medical industries. Although his point of view is often overlooked by the mainstream press, it would be hard to argue that Epstein is unable to get his message out. Aside from having drafted congressional legislation, frequently giving congressional testimony and serving as a key expert (notably in the banning of the pesticides DDT and Aldrin), Epstein is as media savvy as doctors come. He has appeared on many national TV programs including "60 Minutes," "Face the Nation," "Meet the Press," "The MacNeil/Lehrer Report" and others. 4
American Sweatshops Sew U.S. Military Uniforms Boals article exposed the billion-dollar relationship between the Department of Defense and the American garment industry, a relationship that has fostered a wide range of workplace problems. Boal focused on a Lyon Apparel plant in Beattyville, Ky., where government uniforms are made. The plant has been cited 32 times by OSHA for safety and health violations, pays substandard wages to overworked employees and has exposed workers to formaldehyde, a suspected carcinogen used to keep fabric stiff for processing. "About 10,000 American woman are employed sewing government uniforms, often in unsanitary, unsafe conditions," Boal concluded. After the article came out Boal heard that some workers were harassed and that one woman may have been fired by Lyon Apparel. Lyon also executed a forceful counterattack, demanding that Mother Jones retract the story and that Boal come visit the plant. Mother Jones refused to retract the story, although it made a couple corrections, and Boal refused to visit the plant, depending instead on his sources from inside. After the article appeared, Boal was invited to numerous radio shows and said that some local TV stations also picked up the story. Asked why the topic had received scant coverage, Boal suggested that labor issues in general were underreported in the American press and that sweatshop stories in particular "flash across the media landscape intensely, but the coverage tends to be short-lived." 5
Turkey Uses U.S. Weapons to Wipe Out the Kurds The Turkish government is using U.S. weapons to kill and displace a population of 15 million Kurds, the largest ethnic group in the world without a homeland. This civil war represents the single largest use of U.S. weapons anywhere in the world by non-U.S. forces; it has claimed 40,000 lives and has created 2 million refugees. The U.S. continues to coddle and arm the Turkish government (which many observers consider the worst human rights violator on the globe) because of Turkeys strategic position in the Middle East. Since publication of Kevin McKiernans story in March 1999, a major shift in Western coverage of the war in Turkey has occurred. Ironically, that shift came about almost by accident, McKiernan said. "When (Kurdish leader) Abdullah Ocalan was arrested and put on trial in early 1999, hundreds of journalists flocked to Turkey," said McKiernan. "They could only report on the captured rebel leader for so long, so eventually they started digging into the storys context, this massive war against the Kurds." Part of the reason the story hadnt gotten out before, McKiernan explained, is that "Turkey is a nearly impossible place for a journalist to work, because of the censorship and martial law that blanket most of the country. When I was there, in one week I was stopped and detained by Turkish officials 37 times." 6
NATO Defends Private Economic Interests in the
Balkans In November 1998, as NATO threats to bomb Serbia escalated, Diana Johnstone reported that the U.S. governments interests in the Balkans were primarily economic. Basing her analysis on a New York Times story that reported the United States was about to lose its campaign to persuade oil companies to build a pipeline from the Caucasus to the Mediterranean port of Ceyhan, Turkey, Johnstone argued that the solution to this problem was "obvious:" an oil pipeline through the Balkans. "Thus the need for the region to come under a NATO protectorate," wrote Johnstone. Although this rationale for NATO military intervention in the former Yugoslavia was original and indeed was not reported in the mainstream press the reasons for its lack of circulation may have more to do with lack of proof than censorship. Johnstone provided no evidence for her analysis. She quoted no oil industry expert who might support the feasibility or worth of such a pipeline, nor any official or analyst who might have gotten wind of it. Johnstone said she attained no "secret sources" for the story, but did "a lot of background reading and research, which most reporters arent given time to pursue on any given story." Unfortunately, Johnstone did not incorporate this background reading and research into her article, and so her argument remains interesting but weak and unsubstantiated. 7
U.S. Media Reduces Foreign Coverage Since Vietnam, Peter Arnett argues that news outlets have faced regular cutbacks in resources as corporate news machines attempt to wring out the most profits from the least expenses. Foreign correspondents and bureaus hard to establish and expensive to maintain have always been the first news sources to go. Arnett, who won a Pulitzer as a foreign correspondent in Vietnam, does note that "a few of the big boys the New York Times, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Wall Street Journal have stubbornly maintained substantial foreign reporting staffs and produce sterling reports." But television and local dailies, where a great number of people get their news, have all but dropped foreign coverage unless it involves bombs, natural disasters or financial calamity." Editors usually justify these cutbacks with the mantra that foreign news doesnt sell that it is the "newsstand kiss of death." But Arnett points to a Pew Research Center poll, which stated that 15 percent of readers regularly follow international affairs only 1 percent less than Washington politics, 1 percent more than consumer news and 2 percent more than celebrity news. "At a time when Americans need to know more about the world than ever because of globalization and the role of the U.S. in keeping the peace, they know less than ever because we, the media, have stopped telling them," Arnett said. 8
U.S. Plans to Put Weapons in Space, Violating International Law "I must be the most censored writer in America!" said Karl Grossman about his sixth Project Censored award. Grossman has been writing about the nuclearization of space since 1985, when he first learned that NASA was planning to send up space probes with plutonium fuel. Although Grossman has continued to write, teach and raise a general ruckus about the subject, the rest of the nations press remains somewhat dormant. But is the story really censored? "Well, the military is quite brazen about what its doing they want to deploy lasers and other weapons in space to dominate earth from above," said Grossman. "The information is out there its in their press releases, its all on the Web. "But nuclear power has been a taboo subject or sacred cow from the outset," said Grossman. "It has everything to do with who owns the media for example GE owning NBC and the manipulation of the media by the public relations departments of the major corporations involved." "Im honored to get the award, of course, but Im also ashamed to be part of a media industry too timid or corrupt to ferret out taboo information and inform the American public," Grossman said. "I would really prefer to see this story in the New York Times or on 60 Minutes than get the award." 9
Louisiana Promotes Toxic Racism Nixon, a veteran reporter and three-time Project Censored recipient, is known for his detailed, big picture presentation of complex stories. "Toxic Gumbo" a deconstruction of why "Cancer Alley" (the 100-mile stretch between Baton Rouge and New Orleans) has suffered from an overconcentration of oil refineries and industrial plants is a fine example of his work. Cancer Alley is one of the worst examples of "environmental racism" in the United States. Companies have located dangerous and polluting facilities near poor communities of color, resulting in severe health consequences. The state of Louisiana aggressively seeks out chemical companies, providing major incentives and promotional campaigns, to get them to locate there. "No one was very interested in the story when I started digging it up," Nixon said. "But after Toxic Gumbo came out, the issue was picked up pretty well, including by ABC News. Life magazine even ran a cover story about a woman who went to Japan to protest the Shintech corporations plans to build a PVC plant in Cancer Alley. Following all this coverage, Shintech actually abandoned those plans." "Although it got picked up elsewhere," Nixon said, "what separated our story from some of the other coverage is that we looked at local politics, the culture of the area and even traced the issue back to the days of slavery. The fact that many Cancer Alley victims had ancestors who were slaves that wasnt lost on the folks there." 10
The U.S. and NATO Deliberately Started the War in
Yugoslavia The Rambouillet talks the negotiations between Yugoslavia, Kosovo and the five-nation Contact Group that preceded NATOs bombing of Serbia were a sham of diplomacy meant to provoke war. A clause of the Rambouillet Accords, Appendix B, written by U.S. State Department lawyers, made it impossible for Milosevic to comply with NATOs proposed peace process, because it allowed for a NATO military occupation of not just Kosovo, but all of Yugoslavia. Seth Ackerman, media analyst at Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR), reported that the mainstream press portrayed Milosevic as being "hard-line," when in fact his negotiators had said they would consider most of NATOs demands. In the end, Milosevic refused to sign the Rambouillet Accords because the plan granted NATO extraordinary powers, superseded the U.N. and presented no room for compromise. "We intentionally set the bar too high for the Serbs to comply," Ackerman quoted a high-level State Department official at Rambouillet as saying. "They need some bombing and thats what theyre going to get." "Theres no reason to believe reporters from the mainstream press did not have access to the most buried parts of the story," Ackerman said, noting that some reporters may not have quoted this official out of respect for "deep background rules," which ensure their access to important information sources. Vest agreed that this form of self-censorship was pervasive in coverage of the war in Kosovo. Vest pointed out, however, that a number of other news outlets did pick up the story. "I believe Sam Husseini of the Institute for Public Accuracy, as well as columnist Norman Solomon, Hussein Ibish of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination League, whoever compiles the For the Record column on the editorial page of the Washington Post and Newsweeks Michael Hirsh, should also be sharing in this award," said Vest.
Dan Perkins This Modern World comic appears weekly in the Metro Times. His latest book is Penguin Soup for the Soul. Perkins, aka Tom Tomorrow, can be found on the Web at www.thismodernworld.com.
Carrie Ching, Tate Hausman, Don Hazen and Tamara Straus are on the staff of Alternet, which distributes and creates articles for alternative newspapers. |
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