-Caveat Lector-

From:
RA`AD BILBEISI.

  About three weeks ago, I watched one of my regular programs on
Italian TV, to be specific on channel RAI DUE.
The show is called "SCIUSCIA", an exciting show that includes a 60
minute documentary as a "show opener", then it is followed by a
debate that lasts more than 90 minutes. The debate is between the
guests of the show which includes: Politicians, government officials,
newspaper writers/ editors, and special guests and live satellite
links.

 In that particular night on Friday, the show's theme was about the
U.S. bombing of Afghanistan. It started as usual with the 60 minute
documentary. This time the documentary was shot in Afghanistan, and
it contained images of the horrible results of the U.S bombs, the
destruction whole villages, the murder of innocent civillians.
There was also inteviews with Afghan people who lost their loved ones
because of the U.S bombings. One man was repeating over and over: "
There is no Taliban here, no Qaida", "Why did the U.S bomb these
villages?".
 Interviews were also conducted with the locals there, they kept
stressing that "Our religion is Islam, with Taliban or without them,
we are keeping our traditions" as the documentary pointed to the
women "still" wearing "Burqa", and most of the men didn't shave their
beards.
Another witness said that about 500 of the taliban died after the
bombing started, then about [40,000] men of the Taliban and Al-Qaida
ran away to unknown hideouts.
Also there was an interview with a former Taliban intelligence
official, he talked about Bin Laden, that he met him, and how Bin
Laden was a very influencial intelligent man, and that everybody
listened when "Sheik Osama" spoke.

 One of the interesting guests was Gino Strada, the surgeon heading
the Kabul based hospital "EMERGENCY". Gino kept sterssing to another
guest, American beauty, Clarissa Burt, that his hospital has
documented information on the thousands that were killed or wounded
because of the U.S bombs.

 Another special guest was Robert Fisk whom raised the question of
"Why did the Sep. 11 incident happen?" "Why does the Islamic/ Arab
world hate the U.S?"
Robert Fisk explained a lot of misunderstood facts about the Middle
East and the U.S injustice toward the Arabs.
He also mentioned the latest threats he has been getting from people
like John Malkovich.

 Anyway, the show was very interesting, because, unlike other western
news shows, this show "SCIUSCIA" dared to show images of the truth.

To show and say the truth is a very rare and daring trait that is
very uncommon in the U.S media.

Here is a link to the video exerpts from the documentary that
compares the bombed villages in Afghanistan to the ancient city of
POMPEI that was destroyed by the famous volcano in Napoli.

After the link there is an article by Robert Fisk on his experience
in that show.

IN ITALIAN:
http://www.sciuscia.rai.it/fuoriscena/dettaglio/0,5946,2422,00.html

REAL VIDEO:
http://www.sciuscia.rai.it/1800/2002_05_31_fuoriscena_01.rm

OTHER CONTROVESIAL DOCUMENTARIES BY SCIUSCIA:
http://www.sciuscia.rai.it/fuoriscena/0,5936,,00.html

===========================================================================================================================

Imagine if Blair tried to force Paxman off air. In Italy, that sort
of thing is about to happen

By Robert Fisk in Rome
05 June 2002

http://www.independent.co.uk/story.jsp?story=02204#top


Sciuscia, in Neapolitan Italian, means "Shoeshine". It is the most
controversial, provocative, irritating programme on the second
channel of Italy's state television, RAI.
Silvio Berlusconi, the Prime Minister of Italy, would like to make
sure that last week's 33rd edition of Sciuscia – pronounced
'shiewsha' – is the last. In April, Mr Berlusconi claimed that
Michele Santoro, the anchorman of this crazy mix of brilliant
documentaries and That Was The Week That Was scorn, had "made a
criminal use of public television". Italian journalists are waiting
for blood to flow.
Last week's "final" programme of the season – in which I was invited
to take part – included a devastating documentary by the reporter
Corrado Formigli on the West's failure to help Afghanistan. It also
featured a long, angry and sometimes hilarious studio debate on the
folly of our involvement in the country between NGOs, defence
specialists, an American actress, a leftist Italian reporter, a pro-
Israeli journalist and Signor Fisk.
Sciuscia has been a plague on the Berlusconi administration, at one
point investigating the mafia-like background of one of the Prime
Minister's closest colleagues. In presenting the plight of
Palestinians under occupation, Mr Santoro was accused by the Italian
Jewish community – like so many journalists who dare to criticise
Israel – of "anti-Semitism". Leone Paserman, the president of the
Jewish community in Rome, also asked the RAI administration to fire
Mr Santoro. Mr Paserman was subsequently ordered by an Italian court
to pay €50,000 (£32,000) to the journalist.
Like many leftist reporters in Italy, Mr Santoro was a communist – he
began his career as a journalist on the then communist party
newspaper L'Unita but, today, he is the perfect anchorman, as
provocative as Jeremy Paxman and as theatrical as Brian Rix – the
perfect David Frost before Sir David went to seed. He goads his
guests into anger and generosity. RAI's board of five administrators
are not amused. Three of them, appointed in February, are allies of
Mr Berlusconi's Forza Italia and the president of RAI, Antonio
Baldassarre, is close to the Berlusconi coalition.
Sciuscia staff have not been told if they will be allowed another
series – by now, they should already be planning next autumn's
schedule.
In addition to the influence he wields over the RAI board, Mr
Berlusconi has a near- monopoly on private-sector television in
Italy: through his company Mediaset, he controls three private
channels – Channel Five, Italy 1 and Network 4. Through his brother,
he controls the daily newspaper Il Giornale, with a circulation of
200,000. He, in effect, controls the weekly news magazine Panorama,
and also the gossip magazine Chi with a circulation of about 1
million.
Despite promising after his rise to power last year not to meddle in
the running of the public television network, Mr Berlusconi provoked
outcry with his suggestion that there should be a purge of current
affairs presenters such as Mr Santoro. Again the opposition reacted
with horror last month when a majority of members of the ruling
coalition put their names to a motion calling for the suspension of
Sciusia, and three other news programmes accused of "one sidedeness"
during local election campaigning.
Is this just another little fracas between the right-wing papivor of
Italian politics and the subversive, electorally defeated forces of
the left? It would be pleasant to think so. But a few hours after the
last programme of the series, I came upon an exhibition in the
basement of the Vittorio Emanuele monument, the notorious ice-cream
cake of concrete and marble that houses Italy's First World War
unknown warrior. This was a Rome I had never seen before. The
exhibition, a demonstration of 150 years of Italian unity, a plaque
at the entrance announced, was the inspiration of none other than Mr
Berlusconi.
Inside were dozens of military flags, indeed hundreds – in fact, far
too many military flags – from the 1914-18 war and before. There was
a piece of Garibaldi's leg bone, extracted after the 1862 battle of
Aspromonte, and even the great man's right, fur-lined boot, complete
with bullet hole. Far more impressive was a long documentary on the
Italian army's campaign against the Austro-Hungarian empire in the
First World War, when Italy was, of course, on "our" side. Worrying,
however, is the written commentary, appearing on screen as it must
have done when the film was originally put together – presumably in
the early years of Mussolini's rule. Over and over again, war is
referred to as "glorious". The 600,000 Italian casualties of the war
are even referred to, in Italian, as a "holocaust". The last great
battle of the war – at Piave – is treated as a blood sacrifice.
Nothing inaccurate from a factual point of view, perhaps but is blood
really the unifying cement of Italy? I thought I might find an
antidote across the square at the Palazzo Valentini, where another
exhibition – "Portrait of an Era: Art and Architecture in the Fascist
Era" – was arranged in what were once the baths of the Emperor
Trajan. The purpose of the exhibition, Rossana Bossaglia's
introduction informed me, was "to show how Italian art of the Fascist
era developed an expressive language of its own, able to deal with
different themes in a completely independent way...." This sounded a
little dodgy. No condemnation of the Fascist era.
Rather, a peek into what might have been good about it. And, sure
enough, there was an oil painting of Mussolini and then a sculpture
of Mussolini, alongside a photograph of the Duce himself looking at
the very same sculpture. Silvano Moffa, president of the Rome
province, offers us, in the same introduction, the thought that
"Fascism as it was in the 1920s – that is to say a movement
characterised by the need to celebrate itself – was not the same
movement it would become in the 1930s. From the very beginning of his
dictatorship, Mussolini stated that the relationship between politics
and art was an important one, and promoted several exhibitions ..."
What did this mean?
I opened my Italian newspaper. And what did I find? President Carlo
Ciampi of Italy wants to honour Garibaldi, the Italian soldiers who
bravely fought the Nazis on the island of Cephalonia in the Second
World War and – wait for it – the soldiers who fought in the battle
of El Alamein in 1942. But the latter soldiers were fighting for
Mussolini and his Nazi allies. Had Rommel won the battle with Italian
help, the Axis powers would have reached Cairo and Palestine – whose
Jewish population would then have been included in the holocaust. I
wondered, briefly, whether Mr Paserman wouldn't have done better to
complain about this sinister plan of Mr Ciampi rather than slandering
Mr Santoro.
Is this something to be worried about? Italian journalists like to
ameliorate the situation. Mr Berlusconi is a businessman first, they
told me. So is Mr Ciampi, a man who often speaks before he thinks. Mr
Santoro is an artist who likes to play the martyr. And if Sciuscia
comes back on the air, it will be another Italian tempest. If it does
not, however, a lot of Europeans might do well to think more
seriously about Mr Berlusconi, to ask themselves whether he really is
the president of a united Italy. Or a scoundrel.

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