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Latin America News Coverage: Half the Story Is Worse Than None

By Mark Weisbrot, AlterNet. Posted February 1, 2008.


Those who follow the commercial media's coverage of Latin America can end up with less understanding than those who ignore it.
Mark Weisbrot

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Barack Obama had a few choice words for Bill and Hillary Clinton after the South Carolina primary, about people who would "say anything and do anything to win an election."

Imagine if the U.S media had reported his remarks without ever reporting what the candidate was responding to. (He was reacting to former president Bill Clinton's comparison -- widely seen as racial politicking -- of Obama's South Carolina victory to Jesse Jackson's in the 1980's; and Hillary Clinton's attack ads).

It would not be considered acceptable journalism in the United States to omit these key facts. But in U.S. coverage of Latin America, the same standards do not apply.

For example, the press has run a number of reports lately on a diplomatic dispute between Venezuela and Colombia, which is important because the two countries share a 1300 mile border that has been plagued for decades by paramilitary and guerrilla violence. The press was quick to report some rather undiplomatic remarks from President Hugo Chavez of Venezuela about President Uribe of Colombia, whom Chavez called "a liar" and "fit to be a Mafia boss" rather than president.

Missing from US and English-language press coverage were the key events to which Chavez was responding, and indeed the main cause of the current dispute. In the days before last New Year's eve, the Venezuelan government had arranged for the release of high-profile hostages held in the Colombian jungle by the FARC (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia) guerrilla group. A high-level international team of observers were on hand, including former President Nestor Kirchner of Argentina, Brazil's top presidential foreign policy advisor, and representatives from France, Switzerland, Bolivia, Ecuador, Cuba and the Red Cross.

The mission failed, and recriminations followed. President Uribe said that the FARC were lying the whole time, that they never had any intention of releasing the hostages because they did not have one of the three that they had promised to deliver (a 3-year old boy who was born in captivity). President Chavez angrily accused Uribe of "dynamiting" the mission. He said that the FARC was in fact ready to release the two hostages that they held, but had to retreat from Colombian military operations. President Uribe maintained that his military, under orders from him, had held to a cease fire in order to allow the release. Who was telling the truth?

When the two hostages, Consuelo Gonzalez and Clara Rojas, were finally released on January 10, Gonzalez - a former Colombian congresswoman -- told this story to the press:

"'On December 21, we began to walk toward the location where they were going to free us and we walked almost 20 days. During that time, we were forced to run several times because the soldiers were very close,' she said. Gonzalez also lamented that on the day that Alvaro Uribe set as a deadline for the release, the Colombian armed forces launched the worst attack on the zone where they were located. 'On the 31st, we realized that there was going to be a very big mobilization and, in the moment that we were ready to be released, there was a huge bombardment and we had to relocate quickly to another place.'"

No English-language reporters questioned the truth of Gonzalez' testimony; it was simply not reported. The one exception was an Associated Press article, where it was buried and barely mentioned, and edited out of most newspapers. By eliminating this vital information, the media prevented readers from knowing that the Colombian government had reneged on its end of the bargain, putting the lives of the hostages at risk in what looked like an attempt to embarrass Chavez and abort the mission.

This kind of coverage of Latin America is all too common. For example, the democratic government of President Evo Morales in Bolivia is trying to reverse centuries of apartheid rule over the country's indigenous majority. Yet these efforts are often portrayed in the U.S. media as a "power grab" by the president and as "Chavez's project." This is despite the fact that the rewriting of the constitution is a long-standing demand of Bolvia's powerful social movements, long before Evo Morales ever met Hugo Chavez. The omission of crucial information plays an important role in creating a false impression. Thus, CNN reported that "Governors in eastern Bolivia opposed the proposed constitution because it was passed without the presence of opposition legislators," without mentioning that this was because of a boycott by these legislators. (The same report also erroneously states that the new constitution would allow "Morales to run for president indefinitely.")

Editorial boards then use this "half-reporting" to produce even more exaggerated editorials denouncing Latin America's new democracies as "authoritarian" and worse. The result is that those who follow the news coverage of Latin America here can end up with less understanding than those who ignore it.

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See more stories tagged with: propaganda, farc, colombia, hostages, morales, chvez, uribe, latin america, media

Mark Weisbrot is Co-Director and co-founder of the Center for Economic and Policy Research. He is co-author, with Dean Baker, of Social Security: The Phony Crisis (University of Chicago Press, 2000). He is also president of Just Foreign Policy.

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Posted by: asa on Feb 1, 2008 11:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think your article is interesting in that you too tell half the story.the meeting where they "approved " the invalid constiution was blocked outside by evo supporters threating violence. (three peopl had already been killed in this type democracy) the constiution was approved by votes of evo supporters with the ability of evo to run for office indefinnitely,but was changed after chavez lost his chance in venzuela. The change was done by evo supporters without another meeting of delegates. How does that happen in a democracy??? evo further met with the govenors and offered to make more changes? Again it matters who is telling the story as to which half in missing

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Corporate Media
Posted by: frank69 on Feb 1, 2008 3:19 PM   
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US Corporations hate to see democracy in Central and South America. The corporate media reports accordingly.

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Bias Again? Or is it Still?
Posted by: MargoM on Feb 1, 2008 5:36 PM   
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Thank you for reporting this bias in U.S. news media. Your article is very succinct and gives good examples.

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A MILLION VOICES AGAINST FARC
Posted by: marchemos on Feb 1, 2008 8:24 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
http://www.colombiasoyyo.org

A MILLION VOICES AGAINST FARC.

The time has come to use our voices. To cease the silence which has allowed FARC to survive. To make sure that every leader in the world, every guerrilla, hears us when we say: We reject and condemn FARC – EP (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia – People’s Army). The fighting and violence must stop NOW.

Again and again, FARC has been allowed to keep captive the thousands of kidnapped prisoners it has wrongfully detained for decades because their lies and tricks are repeated over and over again, to the point where nobody questions their veracity.
There are few acts more destructive to the dignity of a people than the wholesale kidnapping of innocent civilians. Over the past few years, FARC has continued to illegal and unjustly hold captive the thousands of Colombians who committed no crime other than being in the wrong place, at the wrong time. Meanwhile, they continue to reap the benefits of a vast drug production and trafficking empire, which has given them the money and resources necessary to commit countless crimes against the people of our nation. FARC’s unjustifiable actions have left our country degraded and stricken with poverty after more than forty years of simply trying to defend its people’s security and liberty.


Colombia, Colombians, friends from all over the world, today we are united in our cause:

NO MORE!
NO MORE KIDNAPPING!
NO MORE LIES!
NO MORE MURDER!
NO MORE FARC!

Let’s commit ourselves to join a million voices in this group so we can make a difference, and let the entire world know that we don’t need “People’s Army” here in Colombia; that FARC is a terrorist group, led by murderers and enemies of the people of Colombia and the world. Let us make sure the world knows that to be Colombian does not mean to be a drug dealer or a thief.

This is a cause beyond all political interests or colors. It’s a humanitarian cause, encouraged by a simple sense of solidarity, for the sake and welfare of our citizens.

Join us; We need our voices to be heard.

A million voices against FARC.

Join us at

http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=6684734468

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Alas, it has always been that way ...
Posted by: mmckinl on Feb 2, 2008 9:46 AM   
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We treat Latin America as a servant to our corporations. Naomi Klein and Amy Goodman seem to be the only two who care enough to write or broadcast anything about latin America on a consistent basis that is any where near the truth. Amy has done an outstanding job on Haiti and Naomi has written articles on the latest democracy movements throughout latin America ... John Perkins has become an activist and has written about the IMF and World Bank in Latin America and Naomi of course covered much in her breakthrough work Disaster Capitalism.

With newspapers and news services cutting back it will onlt get worse. I hate to say it , but I think the American public just doesn't give a damn. I hope is that is just conditioning and not who we really are. And to be honest, the magnitude of bad news under Bush could fill an encyclopedia or two or more. It is just hard to keep up when you are deluged all the time with the injustice and crimes of this administration.

Did anybody see TV reports on the NAFTA demonstration in Mexico City ? I caught it in passing on a website.

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What's really happening in South America ? Ever increasing Debt Service
Posted by: mmckinl on Feb 2, 2008 10:23 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Naomi Klein and John Perkins describe the mehods in Disaster Capitalism and Confessions of an Economic Hitman, but after that , the "bankers " move in ...

Nearly all of the world uses debt based fractional banking, which when you analyse it means that the world must go deeper and deeper into debt to service the existing debt and so on and so on, in short a debt spiral. Should the debt creation be stymied for any reason the world's money supply rapidly shrinks causing the economy to sputter and stall.

What this means in practical terms is that more and more resources must be consumed every year to market products to sell to pay for this increasing debt service. Without a contiuous increase in consumption the world soon goes broke due to lack of money to pay the ever increasing debt. It is a vicious cycle of ever increasing debt and ever increasing consumption.


The way this plays out in the third world is two fold. Poor countries must raise ever more hard currency to pay interest and principle on their loans. This means selling whatever the developed countries want (natural resourses, cash farm crops, fishing rights, water rights, infrastructure, public institutions ) or , second, engaging in near slave labor with their workforce to raise this hard money for these payments. They end up sellling their natural resources ,farmlands or public infrastructure , usually below market value, leaving environmental and human degradation behind. People in these areas are forced to engage in this pillage or are forced off ancestral lands to the new emerging mega cities where they have no resources and again must scramble for hard currency to live, usually working menial jobs while their children scavenge garbage or beg. Long gone are the productive farm lands and forests that would provide for them.

The industrial nation's banking and commercial system ravage developing nation's resources, exploit their people and coopt them into this cancerous form of money creation causing ever increasing debt, environmental and human damage.

"At $720 billion, Latin America's foreign debt is equivalent to 38 percent of the continent's GDP. The debt has represented a significant drain on development in Latin America since the region's crisis of the early 1980s, triggered when Mexico defaulted in 1982 on its extreme obligations. Payments on debt service alone can consume over half of any given Latin American government's annual expenditures, frequently at the cost of investment in infrastructure and social programs."

The way to break this cycle of debt based money is to create money based on credit, that is non interest bearing money creation. In this way ever more debt isn't needed to sustain the economy, the money can be credited to the banks to lend on demand and will not be destroyed once the loan is paid. The world wouldn't need ever increasing debt for the economies to prosper, money creation could be allocated for the public good and not the conspicuous consumption that is ravaging our environment and enslaving all the worlds people to ever more debt to service.

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Holding a 3-year-old boy born in captivity...?
Posted by: mjabele on Feb 5, 2008 8:14 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thanks for that detail. Regardless of how the Colombian military behaved, I don't view FARC as anything but a terrorist organization. I'm doubtful that any group which holds hostages for years (?decades), including small children, should ever be "allowed" to take power, regardless of its professed concern for the poor.

The Bolsheviks also professed concern for the poor, and started off their rule by shooting not only the Russian tsar but his family as well, including his children. After that, murdering the innocent seems to have become a habit. We all know how it turned out in the end.

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