The BBC: apologising to torturers

John Pilger - Information Clearing House May 17, 2005

Can you imagine the BBC and other major broadcasters apologising to a rogue
regime which practises racism and ethnic cleansing; which has "effectively
legalised the use of torture" (according to Amnesty International); which
holds international law in contempt, having defied hundreds of UN
resolutions and built an apartheid wall in defiance of the International
Court of Justice; which has demolished thousands of people's homes and given
its soldiers the right to assassinate; and whose leader was judged
"personally responsible" for the massacre of more than 2000 people? 

Can you imagine the BBC saying sorry to Saddam Hussein's Iraq, or other
official demons, for broadcasting an uncensored interview with a courageous
dissident of that country, a man who spent 19 years in prison, mostly in
solitary confinement? Of course not. 

Yet, last month, the BBC apologised "confidentially" to a regime with such a
record, so that its correspondent would be allowed back, having promised to
abide by a system of censorship that continues to gag the dissident. 

The regime is President Ariel Sharon's in Israel, whose war crimes,
appalling human rights record and enduring lawlessness continue to be
granted a certificate of exemption not only by the US-dominated West, but by
respectable journalism. 

The British Labour government's collusion with the Sharon gang is reflected
in the BBC's "balanced" coverage of a repression described by Nelson Mandela
as "the greatest moral issue of the age". Simon Wilson, the correspondent
made to apologise for a proper, important and long overdue interview with
nuclear whistleblower Mordechai Vanunu, will know better in future. 

That is hardly new. What is new is the extent to which insidious state
propaganda has penetrated sections of the media whose independence has been,
until recently, accepted by much of the public. 

To appreciate this, one applies the Law of Opposites and the Law of Silence.
The Law of Opposites can be applied to almost any news broadcast these days.
The long-awaited death of the Pope is a case in point. By reversing the
river of drivel about the Pope - "the people's Pope" (almost universal),
"the man who changed history" (US President George Bush) "a towering figure
revered across all faiths and none" (British PM Tony Blair) - you have the
truth. 

This deeply reactionary man held back history and destroyed lives all over
the world with his fanatical opposition to basic decencies, such as birth
control. He called this "abominable", spitting the word out, and so
condemned millions, from starving infants to babies born with AIDS. In Latin
America, he publicly humiliated courageous priests whose "preference for the
poor" dared to cross the medieval hierarchy he upheld. The claim that he
"brought down communism" is also the opposite of the truth. As I learned
when I reported his papal return to his native Poland in 1979, the church in
that country, whose conservatism he embodied, was a scheming bedfellow of
the Stalinist regime until the wind changed. 

The Law of Opposites can be applied to the current Western government/media
fashion for saving Africa, known as the Year of Africa. The BBC has hosted a
special conference about this, just as Blair will host the G8 summit in July
with "eradicating Africa's poverty" as its theme. 

Like the rest of the impoverished world, African countries qualify for the
vogue enlightenment only if they agree to impose on their people the deadly
strictures of the World Trade Organisation, the International Monetary Fund
and the World Bank - such as the destruction of tariffs protecting
sustainable economies and the privatising of natural resources such as
water. At the same time, they are "encouraged" to buy weapons from British
arms companies, especially if they have a civil war under way or there is a
tension with a neighbour. 

The Law of Silence is applied to crimes committed not by official demons -
Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein, Serb President Slobodan Milosevic et al - but
by Western governments. An Australian Broadcasting Corporation
correspondent, Eric Campbell, in recently promoting a book of his
adventures, described the broadcast "coverage" of the war in Iraq. "Live
satellite is a travesty", he said. "Basically, if [the reporters] are on
satellite, they haven't seen anything. The correspondent is read the stories
from the wire and told that is what they have to say on air - that's in the
majority of cases." 

That may help to explain why the horror of the US attack on Fallujah has yet
to be reported by the other major broadcasters. By contrast, independent
journalists such as Dahr Jamail have reported doctors describing the
slaughter of civilians carrying white flags by US marines. This was
videotaped, including the killing of most of a family of 12. One witness
described how his mother was shot in the head and his father through the
heart, and how a six-year-old boy standing over his dead parents, crying,
was shot dead. None of this has appeared on British television. When asked,
a BBC spokesperson said, "The conduct of coalition forces has been examined
at length by BBC programmes". That is demonstrably untrue. 

Similarly, the Law of Silence applies to the likely American attack on Iran.
Scott Ritter, the UN weapons inspector who in 1999 disclosed that Saddam
Hussein had no weapons of mass destruction and was thereafter virtually
blackballed, has recently revealed that, according to a Pentagon official,
Iran will be attacked in June. Again, he has been ignored by most of the
media. 

The Law of Silence applies to the Bush regime's campaign to subvert and
overthrow Hugo Chavez in Venezuela, arguably the most democratically elected
leader in Latin America, if not the world (nine elections) whose own
"preference for the poor" has diverted the proceeds of the world's fourth
biggest oil supplies to the majority of Venezuelans. 

Last year, I did a long interview with Jeremy Bowen, a BBC reporter I
admire, for a program about war correspondents. Although I guessed that what
was really wanted was my tales of journalistic derring-do on the frontline,
I set about describing how journalists often produced veiled propaganda for
Western power - by accepting "our" version or by omitting the unpalatable,
such as the atrocities of Western state terrorism: a major taboo. I
emphasised that this censorship was not conspiratorial, but often
unconscious, even subliminal: such was our training and grooming. My
contribution did not appear. 
http://www.thetruthseeker.co.uk/print.asp?ID=3192









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