Wednesday, February 04, 2009

FAIR Study: Human Rights Coverage Serving Washington’s Needs

FAIR finds editors downplaying Colombia’s abuses, amplifying Venezuela’s

The commander of Colombia's Armed Forces, Gen. Fredy Padilla, left, listens to Colombia's Army commander, Gen. Mario Montoya, right, after being decorated by Cundinamarca State Gov. Andres Gonzalez, unseen, during a ceremony in Bogota, Wednesday, July 16, 2008. (AP Photo/Fernando Vergara)

By Steve Rendall, Daniel Ward and Tess Hall

Extra!

February 2009

Click here to download pdf.

Any evenhanded comparison of the Colombian and Venezuelan governments’ human rights records would have to note that, though Venezuela’s record is far from perfect, that country is by every measure a safer place than Colombia to live, vote, organize unions and political groups, speak out against the government or practice journalism.

But a new survey by FAIR shows that, over the past 10 years, editors at four leading U.S. newspapers have focused more on purported human rights abuses in Venezuela than in Colombia, and their commentary would suggest that Venezuela’s government has a worse human rights record than Colombia’s. These papers, FAIR found, seem more interested in reinforcing official U.S. policy toward the region than in genuinely supporting the rights of Colombians and Venezuelans...

(click here to view entire report)

Tuesday, February 03, 2009

Latin America Breaks Free

(L-R) Paraguay's President Fernando Lugo, Bolivia's President Evo Morales, Brazil's President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Ecuador's President Rafael Correa and Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez attend the 2009 World Social Forum near the mouth of the Amazon River in the city of Belem January 29, 2009. REUTERS/Raimundo Pacco (BRAZIL)

By Benjamin Dangl

The Progressive

February 2009

Five years ago, when Evo Morales was a rising political star as a congressman and coca farmer, I met him in his office in Cochabamba, Bolivia. He was drinking orange juice and sifting through the morning newspapers when I asked him about a meeting he just had with Brazilian President Lula. “The main issue that we spoke about was how we can construct a political instrument of liberation and unity for Latin America,” Morales told me.

Now President Morales is one of many left-leaning South American leaders playing that instrument. This unified bloc is effectively replacing Washington’s presence in the region, from military training grounds to diplomatic meetings. In varying degrees, Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Ecuador, Paraguay, and Venezuela are demonstrating that the days of U.S.-backed coups, gunship diplomacy, and Chicago Boys’ neoliberalism may very well be over for South America. The election of Barack Obama also gave hope for a less cowboy approach from Washington...

(click here to view entire report)