« April 2024 »
S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30
You are not logged in. Log in
Joe Anybody Latin America Solidarity
Wednesday, 11 January 2017
Mainstream Media Ignores Human Rights Defenders Being Murdered
Mood:  down
Now Playing: South America Frontline Defenders, which has put out an annual report
Topic: HUMAN RIGHTS

Colombia is By Far The Most Dangerous Country for Human Rights Defenders (But You Wouldn’t Know This From The Mainstream Media)

Dan Kovalik Labor & Human Rights Lawyer

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/author/dkovalik-291

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/5873f12ce4b0a5e600a78db0?timestamp=1484054533197

 

Frontline Defenders, which has put out an annual report on Human Rights Defenders (HRDs) at Risk since 1998, just put out its most recent report detailing the struggle of HRDs throughout the world in 2016. As Frontline Defenders details, there were 281 HRDs killed throughout the globe in 2016, and an incredible 85 of these (or about 30%) were from Colombia, the U.S.’s closest ally in the Western Hemisphere.

Another 58 HRDs killed were from Brazil which experienced a U.S.-supported right-wing coup beginning in April of 2016; and 33 were from Honduras which had a right-wing, U.S.-backed coup in 2009. In total, these three countries accounted for about 61% of all HRDs killed world-wide in 2016.

What is more shocking than even these statistics, is the lack of reporting on them that one hears in the mainstream media (MSM).

Colombia in particular receives barely a whisper of reportage from the U.S. press, despite its uniquely bad human rights situation, a human rights situation which has only gotten worse as the peace process in that country progressed. As Frontline Defenders explains:

In Colombia, the progression of the peace process and the establishment of a definitive ceasefire between the government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) . . . was met by an increase in the level of violence experienced by the HRDs. After the peace agreement was unveiled on 26 August, 13 HRDs were assassinated in less than three weeks in Antioquia, César, Cauca and Nariño.

As Frontline Defenders points out, “[l]ocal organizations reported that these and other attacks were carried out by groups who sought to derail or postpone the peace process” – namely, the right-wing paramilitaries backed by the Colombian security forces who are in turn backed by the United States. Indeed, the well-respected NGO, Programa Somos Defensores (We Are Defenders Program) related in its report covering the first half of 2016 that paramilitaries and the official Colombian security forces were responsible for a combined 78% of all aggressions against HRDs, while the FARC guerillas were responsible for a mere 0.1% of such aggressions.

Of course, these figures are the exact opposite of what one might have guessed from consuming mainstream press information which tends to downplay the crimes of the Colombian State while attempting to blame the FARC for the terrible human rights situation in Colombia. Meanwhile, it must be said that the FARC has shown a sincere resolve to end the nearly 53-year conflict in that country, to own up to the crimes it has committed over the years and build a lasting peace in that country.

As all of this illustrates, the mainstream press simply refuses to give equal time to the atrocities carried out by the U.S. and its allies, while instead focusing on the abuses (both imagined and real) of the U.S.’s ostensible enemies.

And so, while the press obsesses about any and all alleged misdeeds of Colombia’s next door neighbor, Venezuela, you might be surprised to learn that Frontline Defenders relates that only 1 HRD was killed in that country last year. But alas, these are inconvenient facts to a press corps which largely has become a mouthpiece for the U.S. State Department, and has stopped doing any real journalism.

The selective concern of the MSM has real-life consequences. If the press focused on the human rights situation in such countries as Colombia proportionally to the abuses they commit, countries like Colombia would receive nearly-daily coverage, and there would be some real accountability for the U.S.’s continued support of the Colombian military to the tune of $10 billion since 2000 and counting. However, as it stands now, there is almost no accountability at all. So, in a real way, the MSM aids and abets the U.S.’s continued support for repressive regimes, while stoking public antipathy for countries the U.S. has designated as our enemies.

We must demand more accountability from both our press and our government in order for human rights to be honored as they should be, instead of being used as a mere bludgeon for the U.S. to wield against countries which are simply too independent for its liking


Posted by Joe Anybody at 9:35 AM
Saturday, 6 June 2015
Oaxaca: Between Rebellion and Utopia - video
Mood:  crushed out
Now Playing: This video is in Spanish
Topic: HUMAN RIGHTS

https://youtu.be/tDCQL9lO9no

 

 

Video Uploaded on YouTube on Oct 24, 2011

On the 14th of June in the capital of Oaxaca in the state of Oaxaca, the protest camp of the teachers union was evicted. They were striking for better salaries and better social conditions for their pupils. This brutal eviction led to a broad solidarity of the population of Oaxaca, which organized themselves in the APPO (People's Assembly of the Peoples of Oaxaca). The APPO not only claims the demission of the responsible overnor Ulises Riuz Ortiz, but made several concrete proposals for a new constitution.

This documentary shows the struggle of the APPO and the daily life in the camps. It lets people from different sectors talk about their reasons for joining the struggle and also about their plans for the time after Ulises. It shows, as well, the brutal repression that the social movements in Oaxaca are facing, which cost the lives of several people.


Posted by Joe Anybody at 3:08 PM
Updated: Saturday, 6 June 2015 3:14 PM
Saturday, 10 July 2010
Cuban Caravan in Portland Oregon
Mood:  lucky
Now Playing: Right 2 survive welcomes the bus to Cuba in Portland on 7.8.10
Topic: HUMAN RIGHTS

Posted by Joe Anybody at 5:17 PM
Wednesday, 10 March 2010
Honduars
Mood:  down
Now Playing: Detention and Disappearances
Topic: HUMAN RIGHTS
Interview: Tortured, Exiled Honduran Journalist Recalls His Experiences
Written by Tamar Sharabi   
Sunday, 14 February 2010 13:04

"It is impossible to separate being a journalist and being a human being. As a reporter I was interested in taking pictures, and I took the first ones because I thought that Isis Murillo Obed was dead. Then I approached him and saw that he was breathing and moving in the density of all the tear gas. People were shouting that he was dead, but when I took him in my arms he opened his eyes and tried to say something that molded into a moan of pain," said Cesar Silva.

History Repeats: Committee of Relatives of the Detained-Disappeared of Honduras
Written by James Rodriguez   
Thursday, 11 February 2010 16:28

“A forced disappearance can be defined as: The illegal detention of a person by a State security agent or a force acquiesced by it, without the appropriate legal procedure, and in which the act is denied without any further information regarding the location or well-being of the detainee.”


Posted by Joe Anybody at 4:36 PM
Updated: Wednesday, 10 March 2010 4:39 PM

Newer | Latest | Older