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Western Media 'guilty' of inciting violence in Iraq...

by Frank Reichert <admin@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Feb 14, 2005 at 08:29 PM

Good evening everyone!

Credit is due here to William Smyth, who passed this article on
to me earlier today.  I wish to share it with a much wider
audience, and you may feel free to publish it to additional
groups, lists, and discussion forums as you may feel appropriate.

Sincerely,
Frank M. Reichert
Moderator, Liberty Northwest Conference & Newsgroup
spk.liberty_nw


*ROME, Feb 14 (IPS) - A peoples tribunal has held much of Western
media
guilty of inciting violence and deceiving people in its reporting
of
Iraq.*

The World Tribunal on Iraq (WTI), an international peoples
initiative
seeking the truth about the war and occupation in Iraq made its
pronouncement Sunday after a three- day meeting. The tribunal
heard
testimony from independent journalists, media professors,
activists, and
member of the European Parliament Michele Santoro.

The Rome session of the WTI followed others in Brussels, London,
Mumbai,
New York, Hiroshima-Tokyo, Copenhagen, Stockholm and Lisbon. The
Rome
meeting focused on the media role.

The informal panel of WTI judges accused the United States and
the
British governments of impeding journalists in performing their
task,
and intentionally producing lies and misinformation.

The panel accused western corporate media of filtering and
suppressing
information, and of marginalising and endangering independent
journalists. More journalists were killed in a 14-month period in
Iraq
than in the entire Vietnam war.

The tribunal said mainstream media reportage on Iraq also
violated
article six of the Nuremberg Tribunal (set up to try Nazi crimes)
which
states: "Leaders, organisers, instigators and accomplices
participating
in the formulation or execution of a common plan or conspiracy to
commit
any of the foregoing crimes (crimes against peace, war crimes and
crimes
against humanity) are responsible for all acts performed by any
persons
in execution of such a plan."

The panel that heard testimonies included Francois Houtart,
director of
the Tricontinental Centre in Belgium that has backed several
peoples
movements in Latin America, and Dr. Samir Amin, director of the
Third
World Forum in Dakar, Senegal. Dr. Haleh Afshar, who teaches
politics
and women's studies at the University of York in Britain, and
Italian
author and newspaper editor Ernesto Pallotta witnessed the
proceedings.

"This is not simply an exercise to denounce the mainstream media
for
their bias and incompetence," said Dr. Tony Alessandrini, a human
rights
activist who has published several articles on the U.S.
colonisation of
Iraq. "These denunciations have been going on for months. Here in
Rome,
we must go further.."

Alessandrini, who helped organised the WTI added, "What we are
being
asked to consider is not simply media bias, but rather the active
complicity of media in crimes that have been committed and are
being
committed on a daily basis against the people in Iraq."

Several experts gave strong testimony. Dr. Peter Philips,
director of
'Project Censured' at Sonoma State University in California where
he
teaches media censorship provided taped testimony. He said that
at no
time since the 1930s has the United States been so close to
"institutionalised totalitarianism", and added, "U.S. society has
become
the least informed, best entertained society in the world."

The WTI Rome session also heard testimony from Dr. David Miller
from
Scotland, author of 'Tell Me Lies: Propaganda and Media
Distortion in
the Attack on Iraq'. "This is about condemning journalistic
complicity
of war crimes," said Dr. Miller, who is also co-editor of
Spinwatch, a
group that monitors public relations and propaganda.

Miller said the Pentagon "does not recognise the concept of
independent
journalists, because they are providers of unfriendly
information", and
that mainstream media in the United States and in Britain was
"complicit
in furthering the selling of the invasion, and ongoing
occupation. All
studies conducted on mainstream media show dominance by
government
policies, and wartime coverage of TV news in the UK was generally
sympathetic to the government's case.."

Fernando Suarez, who lost his son Jesus during the invasion of
Iraq when
he is said to have stepped on an illegal U.S. cluster bomb, also
testified at the tribunal.

Suarez testified that he was first told by the Pentagon that his
son
died from a gunshot to the head, then that he died in an
accident, and
then that he had died in 'friendly fire'.

On inspecting his son's body Suarez said he discovered that his
son had
died from stepping on a cluster bomb.

"I never had the truth from them," Suarez added. "I found the
truth, and
the truth was very simple. On March 26 the Army dropped 20,000
cluster
bombs in Iraq, but only about 20 percent exploded. The other 80
percent
are in the cities and the schools and acting like mines."

Suarez said: "Bush sent my son because he said Iraq had illegal
weapons,
and my son died from an illegal American weapon, and nobody has
spoken
about this. The media will not talk about the illegal American
weapons."

Several witnesses testified about media disinformation over the
siege of
Fallujah. They were presented copies of the award winning
documentary
'Weapons of Mass Deception' by journalist and film-maker Danny
Schechter, who is also executive editor of Mediachannel.org, an
online
media issues network.

Alessandrini said evidence of active complicity of the mainstream
media
in wrongs committed against the people of Iraq, and the wrongs of
deception and incitement, was now overwhelming.

"We work from the understanding that history will recall the
crimes
committed against the people of Iraq by the U.S.," he said. "It
is our
responsibility to record these crimes in order to ensure these
crimes
are never again repeated.”




 1 Posts in Topic:
Western Media 'guilty' of inciting violence in Iraq...
Frank Reichert <admin@  2005-02-14 20:29:30 

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