http://www.sfbg.com/39/49/cover_censored.html
THE SAN FRANCISCO BAY GUARDIAN
Sept. 7-13, 2005, Vol. 39, No. 49
Censored!
Project Censored presents the 10 biggest stories the
mainstream media ignored over the past year.
By Camille T. Taiara
JUST FOUR DAYS before the 2004 presidential election, a
prestigious British medical journal published the results of a rigorous study
by Dr. Les Roberts, a widely respected researcher. Roberts concluded that close
to 100,000 people had died in the invasion and occupation of Iraq. Most were
noncombatant civilians. Many were children.
But that news didn't make the front pages of the major
newspapers. It wasn't on the network news. So most voters knew little or
nothing about the brutal civilian impact of President George W. Bush's war when
they went to the polls.
That's just one of the big stories the mainstream news media
ignored, blacked out, or underreported over the past year, according to Project
Censored, a media watchdog group based at California's Sonoma State University.
Every year project researchers scour the media looking for
news that never really made the news, publishing the results in a book, this
year titled Censored 2006. Of course, as Project Censored staffers
painstakingly explain every year, their "censored" stories aren't
literally censored, per se. Most can be found on the Internet, if you know
where to look. And some have even received some ink in the mainstream press.
"Censorship," explains project director Peter Phillips, "is any
interference with the free flow of information in society." The stories
highlighted by Project Censored simply haven't received the kind of attention
they warrant, and therefore haven't made it into the greater public
consciousness.
"If there were a real democratic press, these are the
kind of stories they would do," says Sut Jhally, professor of
communications at the University of Massachusetts and executive director of the
Media Education Foundation.
The stories the researchers identify involve corporate misdeeds
and governmental abuses that have been underreported if not altogether ignored,
says Jhally, who helped judge Project Censored's top picks. For the most part,
he adds, "stories that affect the powerful don't get reported by the
corporate media."
Can a story really be "censored" in the Internet
age, when information from millions of sources whips around the world in a
matter of seconds? When a single obscure journal article can be distributed and
discussed on hundreds of blogs and Web sites? When partisans from all sides
dissect the mainstream media on the Web every day? Absolutely, Jhally says.
"The Internet is a great place to go if you already
know that the mainstream media is heavily biased" and you actively search
out sites on the outer limits of the Web, he notes. "Otherwise, it's just
another place where they try to sell you stuff. The challenge for a democratic
society is how to get vital information not only at the margins but at the
center of our culture."
Not every article or source Project Censored has cited over
the years is completely credible; at least one this year is pretty shaky (see
sidebar).
But most of the stories that made the project's top 10 were
published by more reliable sources and included only verifiable information.
And Project Censored's overall findings provide valuable insights into the
kinds of issues the mainstream media should be paying closer attention to.
1. Bush administration moves to eliminate open government
While the Bush administration has expanded its ability to
keep tabs on civilians, it's been working to make sure the public and even
Congress can't find out what the government is doing.
One year ago, Rep. Henry A. Waxman (D-Calif.) released an
81-page analysis of how the administration has administered the country's major
open government laws. His report found that the feds consistently
"narrowed the scope and application" of the Freedom of Information
Act, the Presidential Records Act, and other key public information
legislation, while expanding laws blocking access to certain records even
creating new categories of "protected" information and exempting
entire departments from public scrutiny.
When those methods haven't been enough, the Bush administration
has simply refused to release records even when the requester was a
Congressional subcommittee or the Government Accountability Office, the study
found. A few of the potentially incriminating documents Bush and Co. have
refused to hand over to their colleagues on Capitol Hill include records of
contacts between large energy companies and Vice President Dick Cheney's energy
task force; White House memos pertaining to Saddam Hussein's, shall we say,
"elusive" weapons of mass destruction; and reports describing torture
at Abu Ghraib.
The report's findings were so dramatic as to indicate
"an unprecedented assault on the laws that make our government open and
accountable," Waxman said at a Sept. 14, 2004, press conference announcing
the report's release.
Given the news media's intrinsic interest in safeguarding
open government laws, one would think it would be plenty motivated to publicize
such findings far and wide. However, most Americans remain oblivious to just
how much more secretive and autocratic our leaders in the White House have
become.
Source: "New Report Details Bush Administration
Secrecy" press release, Karen Lightfoot, Government Reform Minority
Office, posted on www.commondreams.org, Sept. 14, 2004.
2. Media coverage fails on Iraq: Fallujah and the
civilian death toll
Decades from now, the civilized world may well look back on
the assaults on Fallujah in April and November 2004 and point to them as
examples of the United States' and Britain's utter disregard for the most basic
wartime rules of engagement.
Not long after the "coalition" had embarked on its
second offensive, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Louise Arbour called
for an investigation into whether the Americans and their allies had engaged in
"the deliberate targeting of civilians, indiscriminate and
disproportionate attacks, the killing of injured persons, and the use of human
shields," among other possible "grave breaches of the Geneva
Conventions ... considered war crimes" under federal law.
More than 83 percent of Fallujah's 300,000 residents fled
the city, Mary Trotochaud and Rick McDowell, staffers with the American Friends
Service Committee, reported in AFSC's Peacework magazine. Men between the ages
of 15 and 45 were refused safe passage, and all who remained about 50,000
were treated as enemy combatants, according to the article.
Numerous sources reported that coalition forces cut off
water and electricity, seized the main hospital, shot at anyone who ventured
out into the open, executed families waving white flags while trying to swim
across the Euphrates or otherwise flee the city, shot at ambulances, raided
homes and killed people who didn't understand English, rolled over injured
people with tanks, and allowed corpses to rot in the streets and be eaten by
dogs.
Medical staff and others reported seeing people, dead and
alive, with melted faces and limbs, injuries consistent with the use of
phosphorous bombs.
But you wouldn't know any of this unless you'd come across a
rare report by one of an even rarer number of independent journalists or
known which obscure Web site to log onto for real information.
Of course, the media blackout extends far beyond Fallujah.
The US military's refusal to keep an Iraqi death count has
been mirrored by the mainstream media, which systematically dodges the question
of how many Iraqi civilians have been killed.
Les Roberts, an investigator with the Johns Hopkins
Bloomberg School of Public Health, conducted a rigorous inquiry into pre- and
post-invasion mortality in Iraq, sneaking into Iraq by lying flat on the bed of
an SUV and training observers on the scene. The results were published in the
Lancet, a prestigious peer-reviewed British medical journal, on Oct. 29, 2004
just four days prior to the US presidential elections. Roberts and his team
(including researchers from Columbia University and from Al-Mustansiriya
University, in Baghdad) concluded that "the death toll associated with the
invasion and occupation of Iraq is probably about 100,000 people, and may be
much higher."
The vast majority of those deaths resulted from violence
particularly aerial bombardments and more than half of the fatalities were
women or children, they found.
The State Department had relied heavily on studies by
Roberts in the past. And when Roberts, using similar techniques, calculated in
2000 that about 1.7 million had died in the Congo as the result of almost two
years of armed conflict, the news media picked up the story, the United Nations
more than doubled its request for aid to the Congo, and the United States
pledged an additional $10 million.
This time, silence interrupted only by the occasional
critique dismissing Roberts's report. The major television news shows, Project
Censored found, never mentioned it.
Sources: "The Invasion of Fallujah: A Study in the
Subversion of Truth," Mary Trotochaud and Rick McDowell, Peacework, Dec.
2004-Jan. 2005; "US Media Applauds Destruction of Fallujah," David
Walsh, www.wsws.org (World Socialist Web site), Nov. 17, 2004; "Fallujah
Refugees Tell of Life and Death in the Kill Zone," Dahr Jamail, New
Standard, Dec. 3, 2004; "Mortality before and after the 2003 Invasion of
Iraq," Les Roberts, Riyadh Lafta, Richard Garfield, Jamal Khudhairi, and
Gilbert Burnham, Lancet, Oct. 29, 2004; "The War in Iraq: Civilian
Casualties, Political Responsibilities," Richard Horton, Lancet, Oct. 29,
2004; "Lost Count," Lila Guterman, Chronicle of Higher Education,
Feb. 4, 2005; "CNN to Al Jazeera: Why Report Civilian Deaths?"
Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting, April 15, 2004, and Asheville Global
Report, April 22-28, 2004.
3. Another year of distorted election coverage
Last year Project Censored foretold the potential for
electoral wrongdoing in the 2004 presidential campaign: The "sale of
electoral politics" made number six in the list of 2003-04's most
underreported stories. The mainstream media had largely ignored the evidence
that electronic voting machines were susceptible to tampering, as well as
political alliances between the machines' manufacturers and the Republican
Party.
Then came Nov. 2, 2004.
Bush prevailed by 3 million votes despite exit polls that
clearly projected Kerry winning by a margin of 5 million.
"Exit polls are highly accurate," Steve Freeman,
professor at the University of Pennsylvania's Center for Organizational
Dynamics, and Temple University statistician Josh Mitteldorf wrote in In These
Times. "They remove most of the sources of potential polling error by
identifying actual voters and asking them immediately afterward who they had
voted for."
The eight-million-vote discrepancy was well beyond the
poll's recognized, less-than-1-percent margin of error. And when Freeman and
Mitteldorf analyzed the data collected by the two companies that conducted the
polls, they found concrete evidence of potential fraud in the official count.
"Only in precincts that used old-fashioned,
hand-counted paper ballots did the official count and the exit polls fall
within the normal sampling margin of error," they wrote. And "the
discrepancy between the exit polls and the official count was considerably
greater in the critical swing states."
Inconsistencies were so much more marked in African American
communities as to renew calls for racial equity in our voting system. "It
is now time to make counting that vote a right, not just casting it, before Jim
Crow rides again in the next election," wrote Rev. Jesse Jackson and Greg
Palast in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
Sources: "A Corrupt Election," Steve Freeman and
Josh Mitteldorf, In These Times, Feb. 15, 2005; "Jim Crow Returns to the
Voting Booth," Greg Palast and Rev. Jesse Jackson, Seattle
Post-Intelligencer, Jan. 26, 2005; "How a Republican Election Supervisor
Manipulated the 2004 Central Ohio Vote," Bob Fitrakis and Harvey
Wasserman, www.freepress.org, Nov. 23, 2004.
4. Surveillance society quietly moves in
It's a well-known dirty trick in the halls of government: If
you want to pass unpopular legislation that you know won't stand up to
scrutiny, just wait until the public isn't looking. That's precisely what the
Bush administration did Dec. 13, 2003, the day American troops captured Saddam
Hussein.
Bush celebrated the occasion by privately signing into law
the Intelligence Authorization Act a controversial expansion of the PATRIOT
Act that included items culled from the "Domestic Security Enhancement Act
of 2003," a draft proposal that had been shelved due to public outcry
after being leaked.
Specifically, the IAA allows the government to obtain an
individual's financial records without a court order. The law also makes it
illegal for institutions to inform anyone that the government has requested
those records, or that information has been shared with the authorities.
"The law also broadens the definition of 'financial
institution' to include insurance companies, travel and real-estate agencies,
stockbrokers, the US Postal Service, jewelry stores, casinos, airlines, car
dealerships, and any other business 'whose cash transactions have a high degree
of usefulness in criminal, tax, or regulatory matters' " warned Nikki
Swartz in the Information Management Journal. According to Swartz, the
definition is now so broad that it could plausibly be used to access even
school transcripts or medical records.
"In one fell swoop, this act has decimated our rights
to privacy, due process, and freedom of speech," Anna Samson Miranda wrote
in an article for LiP magazine titled "Grave New World" that
documented the ways in which the government already employs high-tech, private
industry, and everyday citizens as part of a vast web of surveillance.
Miranda warned, "If we are too busy, distracted, or
apathetic to fight government and corporate surveillance and data collection,
we will find ourselves unable to go anywhere whether down the street for a
cup of coffee or across the country for a protest without being watched."
Sources: "PATRIOT Act's Reach Expanded Despite Part
Being Struck Down," Nikki Swartz, Information Management Journal,
March/April 2004; "Grave New World," Anna Samson Miranda, LiP, Winter
2004; "Where Big Brother Snoops on Americans 24/7," Teresa Hampton
and Doug Thompson, www.capitolhillblue.com, June 7, 2004.
5. US uses tsunami to military advantage in Southeast
Asia
The American people reacted to the tsunami that hit the
Indian Ocean last December with an outpouring of compassion and private
donations. Across the nation, neighbors got together to collect food, clothing,
medicine, and financial contributions. Schoolchildren completed class projects
to help the cause.
Unfortunately, the US government didn't reflect the same
level of altruism.
President Bush initially offered an embarrassingly low $15
million in aid. More important, Project Censored found that the US government
exploited the catastrophe to its own strategic advantage.
Establishing a stronger military presence in the area could
help the United States keep closer tabs on China which, thanks to its
burgeoning economic and military muscle, has emerged as one of this country's
greatest potential rivals.
It could also fortify an important military launching ground
and help consolidate control over potentially lucrative trade routes. The
United States currently operates a base out of Diego Garcia a former British
mandate in the Chagos Archipelago (about halfway between Africa and Indonesia),
but the lease runs out in 2016. The isle is also "remote and Washington is
desperate for an alternative," veteran Indian journalist Rahul Bedi wrote.
"Consequently, in the name of relief, the US revived
the Utapao military base in Thailand it had used during the Vietnam War [and]
reactivated its military cooperation agreements with Thailand and the Visiting
Forces Agreement with the Philippines," Bedi reported.
Last February the State Department mended broken ties with
the notoriously vicious and corrupt Indonesian military although human rights
observers charged the military with withholding "food and other relief
from civilians suspected of supporting the secessionist insurgency, the Free
Aceh Movement," Jim Lobe reported for the Inter Press Service.
Sources: "US Turns Tsunami into Military
Strategy," Jane's Foreign Report, Feb. 15, 2005; "US Has Used Tsunami
to Boost Aims in Stricken Area," Rahul Bedi, Irish Times, Feb. 8, 2005;
"Bush Uses Tsunami Aid to Regain Foothold in Indonesia," Jim Lobe,
Inter Press Service, Jan. 18, 2005.
6. The real oil-for-food scam
Last year, right-wingers in Congress began kicking up a fuss
about how the United Nations had allegedly allowed Saddam Hussein to rake in
$10 billion in illegal cash through the Oil for Food program. Headlines
screamed scandal. New York Times columnist William Safire referred to the
alleged UN con game as "the richest rip-off in world history."
But those who knew how the program had been set up and run
and under whose watch were not swayed.
The initial accusations were based on a General Accounting
Office report released in April 2004 and were later bolstered by a more
detailed report commissioned by the CIA.
According to the GAO, Hussein smuggled $6 billion worth of
oil out of Iraq most of it through the Persian Gulf. Yet the UN fleet charged
with intercepting any such smugglers was under direct command of American
officers, and consisted overwhelmingly of US Navy ships. In 2001, for example,
90 of its vessels belonged to the United States, while Britain contributed only
4, Joy Gordon wrote in a December 2004 article for Harper's magazine.
Most of the oil that left Iraq by land did so through Jordan
and Turkey with the approval of the United States. The first Bush
administration informally exempted Jordan from the ban on purchasing Iraqi oil
an arrangement that provided Hussein with $4.4 billion over 10 years,
according to the CIA's own findings. The United States later allowed Iraq to
leak another $710 million worth of oil through Turkey "all while US
planes enforcing no-fly zones flew overhead," Gordon wrote.
Scott Ritter, a UN weapons inspector in Iraq during the
first six years of economic sanctions against the country, unearthed yet
another scam: The United States allegedly allowed an oil company run by Russian
foreign minister Yevgeny Primakov's sister to purchase cheap oil from Iraq and
resell it to US companies at market value purportedly earning Hussein
"hundreds of millions" more.
"It has been estimated that 80 percent of the oil
illegally smuggled out of Iraq under 'oil for food' ended up in the United
States," Ritter wrote in the UK Independent.
Sources: "The UN Is Us: Exposing Saddam Hussein's
Silent Partner," Joy Gordon, Harper's, December 2004; "The Oil for
Food 'Scandal' Is a Cynical Smokescreen," Scott Ritter, UK Independent,
Dec. 12, 2004.
7. Journalists face unprecedented dangers to life and
livelihood
Last year was the deadliest year for reporters since the
International Federation of Journalists began keeping tabs in 1984. A total of
129 media workers lost their lives, and 49 of them more than a third were
killed in Iraq.
In short, nonembedded journalists have now become familiar
victims of US military actions abroad.
"As far as anyone has yet proved, no commanding officer
ever ordered a subordinate to fire on journalists as such," Weissman wrote
in an update for Censored 2006. But what can be shown is a pattern of tacit
complicity, side by side with a heavy-handed campaign to curb journalists'
right to roam freely.
The Pentagon has refused to implement basic safeguards to
protect journalists who aren't embedded with coalition forces, despite repeated
requests by Reuters and media advocacy organizations.
The US military exonerated the army of any wrongdoing in its
now-infamous attack on the Palestine Hotel which, as the Pentagon knew,
functioned as headquarters for about 100 media workers when coalition forces
rolled into Baghdad on April 8, 2003.
To date, US authorities have not disciplined a single
officer or soldier involved in the killing of a journalist, according to
Project Censored.
Meanwhile, the interim government the United States
installed in Iraq raided and closed down Al-Jazeera's Baghdad offices almost as
soon as it took power and banned the network from doing any reporting in the
country. In November the interim government ordered news organizations to
"stick to the government line on the US-led offensive in Fallujah or face
legal action," in an official command sent out on interim prime minister
Eyad Allawi's letterhead and quoted in a November report by independent
reporter Dahr Jamail.
And both American and interim government forces detained
numerous journalists in and around Fallujah that month, holding them for days.
Sources: "Dead Messengers: How the US Military
Threatens Journalists," Steve Weissman, www.truthout.org, Feb. 28, 2005;
"Media Repression in 'Liberated' Land," Dahr Jamail, Inter Press
Service, Nov. 18, 2004.
8. Iraqi farmers threatened by Bremer's mandates
Historians believe it was in the "fertile
crescent" of Mesopotamia, where Iraq now lies, that humans first learned
to farm. "It is here, in around 8500 or 8000 B.C., that mankind first
domesticated wheat, here that agriculture was born," Jeremy Smith wrote in
the Ecologist. This entire time, "Iraqi farmers have been naturally
selecting wheat varieties that work best with their climate ... and
cross-pollinated them with others with different strengths.
"The US, however, has decided that, despite 10,000
years practice, Iraqis don't know what wheat works best in their own
conditions."
Smith was referring to Order 81, one of 100 directives
penned by L. Paul Bremer III, the US administrator in Iraq, and left as a
legacy by the American government when it transferred operations to interim
Iraqi authorities. The regulation sets criteria for the patenting of seeds that
can only be met by multinational companies like Monsanto or Syngenta, and it
grants the patent holder exclusive rights over every aspect of all plant
products yielded by those seeds. Because of naturally occurring
cross-pollination, the new scheme effectively launches a process whereby Iraqi
farmers will soon have to purchase their seeds rather than using seeds saved
from their own crops or bought at the local market.
Native varieties will be replaced by foreign and
genetically engineered seeds, and Iraqi agriculture will become more
vulnerable to disease as biological diversity is lost.
Texas A&M University, which brags that its agriculture
program is a "world leader" in the use of biotechnology, has already
embarked on a $107 million project to "reeducate" Iraqi farmers to
grow industrial-sized harvests, for export, using American seeds. And anyone
who's ever paid attention to how this has worked elsewhere in the global South
knows what comes next: Farmers will lose their lands, and the country will lose
its ability to feed itself, engendering poverty and dependency.
On TomPaine.com, Greg Palast identified Order 81 as one of
several authored by Bremer that fit nicely into the outlines of a US
"Economy Plan," a 101-page blueprint for the economic makeover of
Iraq, formulated with ample help from corporate lobbyists. Palast reported that
someone inside the State Department leaked the plan to him a month prior to the
invasion.
Smith put it simply: "The people whose forefathers
first mastered the domestication of wheat will now have to pay for the
privilege of growing it for someone else. And with that the world's oldest
farming heritage will become just another subsidiary link in the vast American
supply chain."
Sources: "Iraq's New Patent Law: A Declaration of War
Against Farmers," Focus on the Global South and Grain, Grain, October
2004; "Adventure Capitalism," Greg Palast, www.tompaine.com, Oct. 26,
2004; "US Seeking to Totally Re-engineer Iraqi Traditional Farming System
into a US Style Corporate Agribusiness," Jeremy Smith, Ecologist, Feb. 4,
2005.
9. Iran's new oil trade system challenges US currency
The Bush administration has been paying a lot more attention
to Iran recently. Part of that interest is clearly Iran's nuclear program but
there may be more to the story. One bit of news that hasn't received the public
vetting it merits is Iran's declared intent to open an international oil
exchange market, or "bourse."
Not only would the new entity compete against the New York
Mercantile Exchange and London's International Petroleum Exchange (both owned
by American corporations), but it would also ignite international oil trading
in euros.
"A shift away from US dollars to euros in the oil
market would cause the demand for petrodollars to drop, perhaps causing the
value of the dollar to plummet," Brian Miller and Celeste Vogler of
Project Censored wrote in Censored 2006.
"Russia, Venezuela, and some members of OPEC have expressed
interest in moving towards a petroeuro system," he said. And it isn't
entirely implausible that China, which is "the world's second largest
holder of US currency reserves," might eventually follow suit.
Although China, as a major exporter of goods to the United
States, has a vested interest in helping shore up the American economy and has
even linked its own currency, the yuan, to the dollar, it has also become
increasingly dependent on Iranian oil and gas.
"Barring a US attack, it appears imminent that Iran's
euro-dominated oil bourse will open in March, 2006," Miller and Vogler
continued. "Logically, the most appropriate US strategy is compromise with
the EU and OPEC towards a dual-currency system for international oil
trades."
But you won't hear any discussion of that alternative on the
six o'clock news.
Source: "Iran Next US Target," William Clark,
www.globalresearch.ca, Oct. 27, 2004.
10. Mountaintop removal threatens ecosystem and economy
On Aug. 15 environmental activists created a human blockade
by locking themselves to drilling equipment, obstructing the National Coal
Corp.'s access to a strip mine in the Appalachian mountains 40 miles north of
Knoxville. It was just the latest in a protracted campaign that
environmentalists say has national implications but that's been ignored by the
media outside the immediate area.
Under contention is a technique wherein entire mountaintops
are removed using explosives to access the coal underneath a practice that is
nothing short of devastating for the local ecosystem, but which could become
much more widespread.
As it stands, 93 new coal plants are in the works
nationwide, according to Project Censored's findings. "Areas incredibly
rich in biodiversity are being turned into the biological equivalent of parking
lots," wrote John Conner of the Katϊah branch of Earth First! which has
been throwing all its energies into direct action campaigns to block the
project in Censored 2006. "It is the final solution for
200-million-year-old mountains."
Source: "See You in the Mountains: Katϊah Earth First!
Confronts Mountaintop Removal," John Conner, Earth First!,
November-December, 2004.
E-mail Camille T. Tiara at camille@sfbg.com.
For the 15 runner-up stories, go to www.sfbg.com.
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