Barry Grey
2009/07/10
In Tehran, demonstrations called by the defeated US-backed presidential
candidate are given non-stop, wall-to-wall coverage by the American media.
The charges of former prime minister Mir Hossein Mousavi of a stolen
election and a “coup d’etat” are embraced uncritically and reported as fact
by the New York Times, the Washington Post and other “authoritative”
newspapers, without any independent investigation or substantiation. A media
propaganda campaign ensues aimed at isolating and destabilizing the ruling
faction in Iran headed by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
The protests are dominated by better-off sections of the urban middle
class, who largely voted for Mousavi and support his right-wing program
of closer ties to American and European imperialism and a rapid
introduction of pro-market policies. The working class, seeing nothing
to support in the faction of “reformists” headed by Mousavi and the
billionaire former president Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, abstains from
the protests.
The media dispenses with any pretence of objectivity and proclaims the
protest movement and its leaders the spearhead of a “green revolution”
for democracy. Every act of repression by the Iranian regime is given
headline coverage, and rumors of hundreds of deaths are reported as
fact. The US media focuses its wrath in particular on the regime’s
efforts to block Internet and mobile phone communication.
Two weeks later, the US-trained and equipped military of Honduras breaks
into the home of the elected president, bundles him onto a plane and flies
him out of the country at gunpoint. The basic crime of the deposed
president, Manuel Zelaya, is aligning his government with Washington’s
nemeses in Latin America, Venezuela’s Hugo Chávez and Cuba’s Fidel Castro,
and carrying out modest popular reforms within Honduras, such as raising the
minimum wage.
There can be no dispute that Honduras has undergone a coup. But the event is
barely reported by the US press and broadcast media. Neither are the arrests
and deportations of ministers of Zelaya’s government, the closures of local
media outlets sympathetic to the ousted president, the arrests of foreign
journalists and shutdown of US-based outlets such as CNN, and the imposition
of a de facto state of siege, including a dusk-to-dawn curfew and the
mobilization of thousands of Honduran troops in every major city.
The coup regime, which is backed by the Honduran business elite, the
Congress, the courts and the Church, seeks to halt Internet and cell phone
communication—evoking no protest from the US media.
Demonstrations in support of the coup staged by the new regime are dominated
by the wealthy middle class of the capital, Tegucigalpa.
In the teeth of state repression, the Honduran teachers union launches a
60,000-strong strike that closes the schools, and thousands demonstrate in
Tegucigalpa. The demonstrations are dominated by trade unionists, workers,
the unemployed and the rural poor. This working class resistance to the coup
barely gets a mention in the US media.
On Sunday, July 5, troops barricading the airport at Tegucigalpa fire on
unarmed demonstrators who have gathered to welcome Zelaya as he attempts to
land a chartered plane and resume his office. A 19-year-old youth is shot
and killed. Again, barely a mention in the US news media.
One can only imagine how the US media would have responded had Ahamdinejad
arrested Mousavi and thrown him out of Iran. Or the howls of indignation
that would have erupted had the Iranian president blockaded the airport to
prevent him from returning.
Examples of the double standard applied to Iran and Honduras abound. Just to
cite a few:
CNN made great play of the efforts of the Iranian regime to censor the news
and intimidate foreign journalists. It has said nothing about the shutdown
of its own broadcasts by the Honduran coup government.
On July 4, CNN.com reported that it had received a video tape showing
Honduran troops shooting out the tires of buses bringing anti-coup
demonstrators to Tegucigalpa from the countryside. This video has been given
little, if any, airplay by the network.
Most significant is the virtual absence of coverage in the US media of the
murder and wounding of anti-coup demonstrators at Tegucigalpa airport on
Sunday. The Financial Times on Monday provided a chilling account of the
atrocity which makes clear its premeditated character. Reporting that a
crowd of about 1,500 had gathered at the perimeter fence of the airport to
welcome Zelaya’s plane, the newspaper writes:
“However, at about 3 PM on Sunday, soldiers guarding the runway to prevent
the return of Mr. Zelaya launched an offensive against the unarmed crowd,
according to witnesses.
“They opened fire from positions inside the airport and then sent teargas
into the crowd.
“Moments later, a handful crossed the perimeter fence, which had been cut by
the demonstrators, raised their automatic rifles and pointed them towards
the mass of terrified men, women and children. Then they opened fire again.
At least one person was killed, and as many as 30 were injured.”
The Latin American press has widely published photos of the fatally wounded
youth, Isis Obed Murillo, being dragged away by fellow protesters. No such
photos have appeared in major US newspapers or on television news channels.
Murillo remains unnamed and unmourned in the American media.
One need only compare this callous treatment to the media frenzy over the
death on June 20 of Neda Agha Soltan in Tehran. The death of the 27-year-old
student, who was reportedly a bystander at a pro-Mousavi protest, occurred
under murky circumstances. The government denied responsibility, but the
media immediately declared her a martyr of the “green revolution.” Her
picture was splashed across the front pages of newspapers and broadcast by
every TV channel. “Neda” was proclaimed the “Joan of Arc” of the Iranian
opposition.
This tale of two capitals provides a graphic illustration of the character
and role of the American media. Owned and controlled by corporate goliaths,
it functions as an adjunct of the state and a propaganda machine in behalf
of US imperialist interests. Its class bias—and that of the lavishly paid
individuals who serve as top editors, senior reporters and TV anchormen—is
underscored by the diametrically opposed responses to the protests in Tehran
and Tegucigalpa.
The same role is played by the so-called “progressive” liberal media, which
has uniformly lined up behind the US campaign against the ruling faction in
Iran. The web site of the Nation magazine on Wednesday carried as its lead
an article by its Iran correspondent, Robert Dreyfuss, hailing calls by pro-Mousavi
forces for new demonstrations. One searches in vain for an article on the
events in Honduras. (For more on Dreyfuss, see: Nation’s man in Tehran: Who
is Robert Dreyfuss?”.)
The American media adheres to no standards and observes no limits in
carrying out its function of manipulating public opinion in accordance with
the objectives, domestic and foreign, of the American ruling elite. Nothing
so clearly demonstrates the decay of American democracy and the “free press”
in the United States than the manner in which it lines up behind phony
“color revolutions” against regimes deemed inimical to US interests and
ignores flagrantly antidemocratic measures by regimes backed by the CIA, the
military and the State Department.
http://www.mediareviewnet.com/index.p ... -tale-of-two-capitals.php