Fenomena "wartawan amplop" seperti di Indonesia, juga
terjadi di Amerika....????

====================================================
THE NEW YORK TIMES
September 9, 2006 
U.S. Paid 10 Journalists for Anti-Castro Reports 
By ABBY GOODNOUGH
<http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 09/09/washington
/09cuba.html>

MIAMI, Sept. 8 — The Bush administration’ s Office of
Cuba
Broadcasting paid 10 journalists here to provide
commentary on Radio
and TV Martí, which transmit to Cuba government
broadcasts critical
of Fidel Castro, a spokesman for the office said
Friday.

The group included three journalists at El Nuevo
Herald, the
Spanish-language sister newspaper of The Miami Herald,
which fired
them Thursday after learning of the relationship.
Pablo Alfonso, who
reports on Cuba for El Nuevo Herald, received the
largest payment,
almost $175,000 since 2001.

Other journalists have been found to accept money from
the Bush
administration, including Armstrong Williams, a
commentator and
talk-show host who received $240,000 to promote its
education
initiatives. But while the Castro regime has long
alleged that some
Cuban-American reporters in Miami were paid by the
government, the
revelation on Friday, reported in The Miami Herald,
was the first
evidence of that.

In addition to Mr. Alfonso, the journalists who
received payment
include Wilfredo Cancio Isla, who writes for El Nuevo
Herald and
received about $15,000 since 2001; Olga Connor, a
freelance reporter
for the newspaper who received about $71,000; and Juan
Manuel Cao, a
reporter for Channel 41 who got $11,000 this year from
TV Martí,
according to The Miami Herald, which learned of the
payments through
a Freedom of Information Request.

When Mr. Cao followed Mr. Castro to Argentina this
summer and asked
him why Cuba was not letting one of its political
dissidents leave,
Mr. Castro called him a “mercenary” and asked who was
paying him.

Mr. Cao refused to comment Friday except to say on
Channel 41 that he
believed the Cuban government knew in advance about
the article in
The Miami Herald. Most of the other journalists could
not be reached.
Ninoska Perez-Castelló n, a commentator on the popular
Radio Mambí
station here, said she had received a total of $1,550
from the
government to do 10 episodes of a documentary- style
show on TV Martí
called “Atrévete a Soñar,” or “Dare to Dream,” and saw
nothing wrong
with it. Her employer has always known about the
arrangement, she
added.

“Being Cuban,” Ms. Perez-Castelló n said, “there’s
nothing wrong with
working on programs that are on a mission to inform
the people of
Cuba. It’s no secret we do that. My face has always
been on the
shows.”

But Al Tompkins, who teaches ethics at the Poynter
Institute for
Media Studies in St. Petersburg, called it a conflict
of interest for
journalists to accept payment from any government
agency.

“It’s all about credibility and independence,” Mr.
Tompkins said. “If
you consider yourself a journalist, then it seems to
me it’s an
obvious conflict of interest to take government
dollars.”

Lincoln Diaz-Balart, a Republican congressman and one
of Miami’s most
stridently anti-Castro voices, said he believed
editors at El Nuevo
Herald and The Miami Herald had known that the three
writers for El
Nuevo had worked for the Office of Cuba Broadcasting.
He pointed to
articles from both papers in 2002 that describe Mr.
Alfonso as a
moderator for a program on Radio Martí and Ms. Connor
as a paid
commentator for the station.

But Robert Beatty, vice president for public affairs
at the Miami
Herald Media Company, said the editor of El Nuevo,
Humberto Castello,
learned only on Thursday. The Herald, long owned by
Knight Ridder,
was acquired in March by the McClatchy Company.

Mr. Beatty said that Jesús Diaz, publisher of The
Miami Herald and El
Nuevo Herald, had decided to fire Mr. Alfonso and Mr.
Cancio and to
sever ties with Ms. Connor, a freelance journalist who
wrote about
Cuban culture.

“Journalism’s ethical guidelines are neither
subjective nor
selectively enforced,” Mr. Beatty said. “Where conduct
of this sort
is brought to our attention, we act decisively.”

Mr. Cancio said Friday evening that his supervisors
had known and
approved of his appearances on Radio and TV Mambí,
during which he
said he always expressed his own opinions and not the
government’s.

“It is for these reasons that I deny any conflict of
interest in my
professional behavior,” he said, “and I believe my
termination to be
an unfair and disproportionate decision made in bad
faith.”

Pedro Roig, director of the Office of Cuba
Broadcasting, could not be
reached for comment. But he told The Miami Herald that
hiring
Cuban-American journalists was part of a broader
mission to improve
the stations’ quality.

Joe O’Connell, a spokesman for the government’s
International
Broadcasting Bureau, which oversees the Office of Cuba
Broadcasting
as well as Voice of America and Radio Free Europe,
said the bureau
did background checks on journalists who contributed
to its
programming but had no ethics code for them.

After Mr. Williams admitted in 2005 to accepting money
from the
Federal Education Department through a public
relations company,
federal auditors said the Bush administration had
violated the law by
disseminating “covert propaganda.”

A few months later, The Los Angeles Times reported
that the Pentagon
had paid millions of dollars to another public
relations firm to
plant propaganda in the Iraqi news media and pay
friendly Iraqi
journalists monthly stipends.

Government spending on Radio and TV Martí — $37
million this year —
has long been the subject of criticism because the
broadcasts appear
to reach only a minute number of Cubans. The Cuban
government jams
the signals. This year, the Bush administration spent
$10 million on
a new plane designed to transmit TV Martí more
effectively.

Terry Aguayo contributed reporting from Miami.




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