Showing posts with label UK Media Coverage of Venezuela. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UK Media Coverage of Venezuela. Show all posts

Tuesday, 15 December 2009

A Decade of Propaganda? The BBC’s Reporting of Venezuela

[Researchers at the University of the West of England, UK, have exposed ongoing and systematic bias in the BBC’s news reporting on Venezuela. Dr Lee Salter and Dr Dave Weltman analysed ten years of BBC reports on Venezuela. Their findings so far show that the BBC’s reporting falls short of its legal commitment to impartiality, truth and accuracy.]

A Decade of Propaganda? The BBC’s Reporting of Venezuela

Monday 14th December 2009, by Lee Salter -Venezuelanalysis.com

Researchers at the University of the West of England, UK, have exposed ongoing and systematic bias in the BBC’s news reporting on Venezuela. Dr Lee Salter and Dr Dave Weltman analysed ten years of BBC reports on Venezuela since the first election of Hugo Chavez to the presidency in an ongoing research project, and their findings so far show that the BBC’s reporting falls short of its legal commitment to impartiality, truth and accuracy.

The researchers looked at 304 BBC reports published between 1998 and 2008 and found that only 3 of those articles mentioned any of the positive policies introduced by the Chavez administration. The BBC has failed to report adequately on any of the democratic initiatives, human rights legislation, food programmes, healthcare initiatives, or poverty reduction programmes. Mission Robinson, the greatest literacy programme in human history received only a passing mention.

(click here to view entire article)

Monday, 21 September 2009

The Guardian Retracts False Claims that Hugo Chavez is a "Pariah"

The Guardian newspaper has had to retract false claims made by Ian Black, the Middle East Editor, which labelled Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez a “contender for the ‘pariah’ status Gaddafi held for so long."

Ian Black made his claim, which is without any basis, in an article titled Shadow of Megrahi hangs over Libya’s mass celebration of Gaddafi’s 40 years on 31 August 2009.

Following calls by Samuel Moncada, the Venezuelan Ambassador in London, for a retraction, Siobhain Butterworth the Guardian Reader’s Editor, has explained that the newspaper has “removed the sentence from the web article and added a footnote documenting the change.”

This is the second time that a British publication retracts from previous accounts in relation to Venezuela. Last month The Economist retracted from an inaccurate statement about alleged participation of Venezuelan troops in military activities in Bolivia.

Samuel Moncada said: “I am pleased that The Guardian has retraced its false claim that President Chavez is a pariah. Unfortunately there is too much inaccuracy and distortion in the British media about developments in the Venezuela. There will be ongoing efforts to counter these misrepresentations. Whatever views are held on the changes underway in Venezuela today, these should be reported accurately and honestly to allow the readers to make up their own mind"

Venezuelan Embassy Press Office 18 September 2009

Notes to Editors: 
1) The correction can be seen at http://www.guardian.co.uk/theguardian/2009/sep/17/corrections-and-clarifications 
2) The correction by The Economist can be found at http://www.economist.com/world/americas/displaystory.cfm?story_id=14142418
3) For more details, please contact Mr Alvaro Sanchez at 0207-584-4206

Wednesday, 5 August 2009

Free press? Venezuela beats the US

[Of course Chávez's new media law is bad. But it won't make a dent in the huge amount of press freedom in Venezuela]

Free press? Venezuela beats the US

August 4th 2009, by Mark Weisbrot - Comment is Free (The Guardian)

Denis MacShane attacks the British left for defending Hugo Chávez, the Venezuelan president, against an onslaught from the media, "new cold warriors", and rightwing demagogues throughout the world. His rhetorical trick is to tar the left with a new media law currently being debated in the Venezuelan congress, which he says "would impose prison sentences of up to four years for journalists whose writings might divulge information against 'the stability of the institutions of the state'."

Of course this is a bad law. There are a number of bad laws on the books in Venezuela, and in fact numerous countries in the region havedesacato (pdf) laws that make it a crime to insult the president. Do MacShane's targets – he mentions Ken Livingstone and Richard Gott – support such laws? I would bet serious money that they do not. So his main line of attack is misleading if not downright dishonest.

(click here to view entire article)


Saturday, 18 July 2009

British Media Remain Silent Over the Expelling of Telesur and VTV Journalists from Honduras

July 17th 2009, by Press Office - Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela in the United Kingdom

Unlike Venezuela and other countries, a majority of the British public ignores the recent events that occurred last week when six Venezuelan journalists from Telesur and VTV (Venezuelan Television) were expelled from Honduras by the de facto President Roberto Micheletti. Since the coup took place on 28th June 2009 there has been a great level of misinformation in Great Britain about what has been happening in Honduras, and the fact that six Venezuelan journalists were expelled from Honduras was not worth reporting by British newspapers.

For instance, Rory Carroll, The Guardian Latin American correspondent, has written in the past seven days about the death of a hippopotamus belonging to deceased drug-trafficker Pablo Escobar in Colombia and the visit of the Royal Ballet of Great Britain to Cuba. Yet, Carroll has not published anything about the expelled Venezuelan journalists in Honduras. Other British newspapers, such as: The Times and The Financial Times have chosen to ignore this subject, despite having correspondents in the region.

(click here to view entire press release)


The Economist Increases its Smear Campaign Against Venezuela by Making up a Venezuelan Military Intervention in Bolivia

July 17th 2009, by Press Office - Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela in the United Kingdom

As part of its smear campaign against Venezuela, the British magazine The Economist published an article about the political situation in Bolivia titled “The Permanent Campaign” (July 18 – 24 2009, page 51), which states that “Venezuelan troops helped quell a rebellion centered on the airport at Santa Cruz in the east in 2007”.

It is well known, however, that Venezuelan soldiers have never participated in any type of operation against Bolivian civilians. This false accusation made up by The Economist has also been repeated by the fascist opposition of Santa Cruz.

(click here to view entire press release)


Sunday, 8 February 2009

Francisco Toro and Venezuela’s “Savage” Democracy

[In a recent online debate about the 10th anniversary of Hugo Chávez’s presidency in Venezuela Francisco Toro described what he saw as the corrupting of Venezuela’s democracy and general descent into authoritarianism. While Toro’s conception of democracy appears at first glance to be an orthodox one, on closer inspection it becomes highly idiosyncratic and sheds a great deal of light both on the democratic revolution taking place in Venezuela and the type of opposition it has had to confront.]

Francisco Toro and Venezuela’s “Savage” Democracy

February 8th 2009, by Samuel Grove - Red Pepper Venezuela Blog

In a recent online debate about the 10th anniversary of Hugo Chávez’s presidency in Venezuela Francisco Toro described what he saw as the corrupting of Venezuela’s democracy and general descent into authoritarianism. While Toro’s conception of democracy appears at first glance to be an orthodox one, on closer inspection it becomes highly idiosyncratic and sheds a great deal of light both on the democratic revolution taking place in Venezuela and the type of opposition it has had to confront.

The ‘anti-democratic’ charge is one frequently levelled at Chavez by commentators and groups (and more controversially an international human rights organisation). However, it has to be conceded, even by those making this charge, that it is counterintuitive to say the least. Under Chavez, Venezuelans have gone to the polls a record number of times. In the most recent municipal elections Chavez’s PSUV received an impressive 52.5% of votes cast and won 17 of 22 governorships in the process. Participation was 65% (unheard of in western democracies for this type of election), a figure which tallies with recent findings of the respected polling agency Latinobarómetro which reported that satisfaction with democracy in Venezuela was the second highest in the region. So the anti-democratic charge has nothing to do either with the degree of public consultation or public endorsement.

However Toro remains defiant on this point; he writes “democracy means more than just elections” and while Venezuela has had “more and more elections” this has coincided with “less and less democracy”. In terms of tangible evidence to support his assertion, Toro makes the same two allegations Human Rights Watch (HRW) made back in September; both of which are distinctly dubious.

The first allegation concerns the independence of the judiciary. The Chavez government, Toro claims, has undermined democracy by “purging all but die hard loyalists” from the Supreme Court. Yet this was the same Supreme Court that was complicit in the April 2002 coup that briefly removed Chavez from power. As pointed out by Gregory Wilpert, it is difficult to imagine any “government in the world [that] could tolerate a Supreme Court that claims there was no coup when everyone else in the world recognizes that there was one”. It is also worth noting that since Chavez’s Supreme Court alleged “purge” countless decisions have gone against Chavez and his supporters.

The second allegation refers to freedom of expression. Echoing HRW’s accusations (only more hysterically) he writes “the Venezuelan state has morphed into an extension of a single man's will, where every dissenting idea is presumed treasonous and where only unquestioning submission to the president's ideology protects you from the increasingly brazen abuse of state power.” In Venezuela there is an abundance of dissenting opinion as the vast majority of newspapers and television channels are in the hands of the opposition. This freedom is not confined to the educated “articulate” elites. Public opposition regularly expresses their dissatisfaction with the government, sometimes even violently.

If this were the sum total of Toro’s case against Chavez then it would be a meagre one indeed. However the thrust of Toro’s criticisms do not concern the state of Venezuela’s democratic institutions so much as the discursive climate in which they preside. He writes that the period under Chavez has seen a “gradual debasement of our public discourse” to the extent that its “relentlessly polarising” character threatens “our capacity to co-exist peacefully, side-by-side, with people whose political ideas we do not share.”

Toro, a Venezuelan journalist, political scientist and blogger who has reported for the Washington Post, the New York Times and the Financial Times, is unquestionably a major contributor to the public discourse he describes. It is then worth taking a look at whether Toro himself promotes such a discourse of “co-existence”.

Fortunately we do not need to conduct a deep and thorough analysis of Toro’s writings in order to find out his views of “political ideas [he does] not share” as he has provided his own detailed synopsis of it here.

Drawing from the work of the philosopher J.M. Briceño Guerrero, Toro describes a number of “separate, mutually incompatible strains” to Latin American culture. The strain that Toro himself belongs to is the “Western rationalist” strain. This strain derives from the European conquest of the hemisphere and is the “discourse of privilege” and “the privileged”. Western rationalists are committed to a “basic faith in reason… as the key to understanding… social reality.” Toro opposes this strain with the non-western/anti-rational Savage sentiments of Venezuela’s poor majority, a strain that expresses itself in a “deep loathing for the privileged [and] a guttural rejection of [rationalism]”. For Toro, the Savage strain has reached its apotheosis with chavismo, a man that has finally given voice to the “verbalist political impulse of the savage,” and more to the point turned those impulses into “something it has never been before: a discourse of power”.

Toro does not deny that Chavez and the PSUV represent the integration, possibly for the first time, of a popular poor majority into the political arena. What he rejects is the idea that this is a democratic development. Toro is able to criticise Venezuela’s anti-democratic tendencies only by inverting the meaning of ‘democracy.’ For Toro democracy does not mean ‘government by the people’, it refers to a peculiar brand of rationality exclusive to the West. This discourse of rationality, Toro explains is a discourse of privilege and the privileged. It is they alone who can realise the democratic possibilities of “deliberate social change and universal human rights, expressed in the texts of constitutions… and in the scientific conceptions of humanity.”

Toro’s intellectual sleight of hand is clever but not new. As Richard Seymour has pointed out this has been an ideological feature of imperialism and domination for as long as democracy has threatened to undermine them. “It is often implied that democracy is a kind of technology, a cultural state, rather than a political one. This is a common assumption on the part of those who would wish to deny the right to independence and self-government to non white peoples.”

Of course the notion that “rationality” is peculiar to either the West (or Western culture) is a myth. Chavez’s supporters can rightly claim that the development course Venezuela has pursued has been both rational in principle and in practice. Since Chavez has come to power Venezuela has experienced rapid economic growth (since 2003 alone GDP has grown by a remarkable 94%). Furthermore the proceeds have been shared out among the population. According to the National Institute of Statistics (INE), poverty in Venezuela has dropped by nearly 50% from 50.5% in 1998 to 26% in 2008. These economic successes have been coupled with rational social policies. In health care the number of primary care physicians has increased 12 fold from 1999-2007. In particular the Mision Barrio Adentro programme has provided free healthcare to millions of poor Venezuelans in the slums, many of whom had limited or no access prior to its introduction. Investment in education has increased from 3.9% of GDP back in 1998 to 7% ten years later, bringing approximately 1.3 million more children into the school system in the process. In higher education enrolment has doubled since Chavez came to power. All the while the national public debt has been cut by more than half from 30.7% in 1999 to 14.3% today.

In George Orwell’s 1984 language is manipulated to ‘meet the ideological needs’ of the powerful; the objective being to make certain ‘modes of thought impossible’. This involved the invention of new words, the elimination of undesirable words and stripping words of their orthodox meanings. While Newspeak is a dystopic vision, the device is common among political elites and their supporters. A brand of Newspeak particularly favoured by elite opinion is the dressing up of offensive half baked ideas into sophisticated technical jargon. The Guardian describes Toro’s blog as a must read. I strongly suggest that anyone who takes the Guardian’s advice not be intimidated by Toro’s [attempted] elaborate prose and high minded references to status figures like Derrida and Foucault. Instead they should stick with their gut reaction. Toro’s assertions are indeed both “relentlessly polarising” and quite breathtakingly offensive. More importantly they should remember what words mean. “Democracy”, if it is to mean anything at all, means the political inclusion of all—regardless of wealth or privilege. For those in favour of this principle, the last 10 years of the Chavez government is very much something to celebrate.

Wednesday, 4 February 2009

'Guardian' Comment Piece Falsifies Venezuelan Reality

[Vanessa Neumann's negative comment piece in today's Guardian ('No, Chávez is not the answer to Venezuela's poverty and inequality') contains a number of false claims, including that "praise for the president [Chávez] flies in the face of facts on literacy and other social indicators."]

'Guardian' Comment Piece Falsifies Venezuelan Reality

February 4th 2009, by Venezuela Information Centre

Vanessa Neumann's negative comment piece in today's Guardian ('No, Chávez is not the answer to Venezuela's poverty and inequality') contains a number of false claims, including that "praise for the president [Chávez] flies in the face of facts on literacy and other social indicators." 5 of the key false claims in the piece, and the reality with regards to these, are below.

1) Claim: "None of Chávez's health and human development indicators are beyond that which is normal in the midst of the sort of oil boom which Venezuela recently enjoyed."

Reality: It is not the case that in all oil-exporting countries when oil prices go up that poverty or social inequality dramatically declines. The 1970s oil price increases were greater in real (inflation adjusted) terms than those recently. But in the 1970s, in Venezuela income per head fell relative to the average for the eight other largest South American economies, even though they did not have such oil wealth. To make use of oil price rises to decrease poverty, a country needs to have a strong state machinery capable of redistributing the wealth; something Chávez has gone about establishing in Venezuela. Additionally, the true scale of poverty reduction in Venezuela in recent years can't be underestimated – 75.5% percent of the population were in poverty in 1995.

2) Claim: There are "severe food shortages of staples such as milk, eggs, beans and rice."

Reality: Venezuela's National Nutrition Institute estimates that 98 per cent of Venezuelans eat three times per day thanks to government provision of subsidised food.

3) Claim: "In 2005 he [Chávez] announced that his Robinson programme had eliminated illiteracy…. That too looks false. A study conducted by Francisco Rodríguez (former chief economist of the Venezuelan national assembly) and Daniel Ortega (of Venezuela's IESA business school) found that at the end of 2005 there were more than 1 million illiterate Venezuelans, not significantly down from the 1.1 million in the first half of 2003, when the Robinson programme started."

Reality: Due to 'Mission Robinson' in Venezuela, 1.6 million Venezuelans have learnt to read and write. The Rodriguez/Ortega report quoted here has been discredited by the well-respected CEPR (see http://www.cepr.net/documents/publications/literacy_2008_05.pdf) who argued it "has serious problems and their statistical tests lack power and are not robust. Even overlooking these issues, it is only by ignoring reasonable assumptions about the [illiteracy] program's reach that they can claim to show that the program was not a large-scale effort." Indeed, Rodriguez is hardly a reliable source on the current government, having been part of the previous regime.

4) Claim: Chávez is guilty of "economic mismanagement."

Reality: Since the Government gained control of PDVSA in 2003, Venezuela has had one of the highest growth rates in the region, a dramatic reduction in debt and an accumulation of currency reserves.

5) Claim: "The average share of the budget devoted to health, education and housing under Chávez (25%) is identical to that in the last eight years before his election" and "inflation rates for healthcare [are] around 65%."

Reality: Prior to 1998, no system of free healthcare for the mass of the population was developed. Now, the share of national income devoted to public health has more than doubled. This has meant infant mortality has been reduced, from 21.4 per 1,000 live births in 1998 to 13.7 in 2007, with the World Health Organisation acknowledging "an accelerated decline in the infant mortality rate and prevalent childhood diseases." Additionally, the overwhelming majority of Venezuelans now have access to free public healthcare, rather than facing "inflation rates for healthcare."

Friday, 30 January 2009

The seeds of Latin America's rebirth were sown in Cuba


[The progressive alternatives to neoliberalism being pursued in Latin America, including in Venezuela, have their roots in Cuba's revolution.]

The seeds of Latin America's rebirth were sown in Cuba

January 29th 2009, by Seamus Milne - The Guardian

On 9 October 1967, Che Guevara faced a shaking sergeant Mario Teran, ordered to murder him by the Bolivian president and CIA, and declared: "Shoot, coward, you're only going to kill a man." The climax of Stephen Soderbergh's two-part epic, Che, in real life this final act of heroic defiance marked the defeat of multiple attempts to spread the Cuban revolution to the rest of Latin America.

But 40 years later, the long-retired executioner, now a reviled old man, had his sight restored by Cuban doctors, an operation paid for by revolutionary Venezuela in the radicalised Bolivia of Evo Morales. Teran was treated as part of a programme which has seen 1.4 million free eye operations carried out by Cuban doctors in 33 countries across Latin America, the Caribbean and Africa. It is an emblem both of the humanity of Fidel Castro and Guevara's legacy, but also of the transformation of Latin America which has made such extraordinary co-operation possible.

The 50th anniversary of the Cuban revolution this month has already been the occasion for a regurgitation of western media tropes about pickled totalitarian misery, while next week's 10th anniversary of Hugo Chávez's presidency in Venezuela will undoubtedly trigger a parallel outburst of hostility, ridicule and unfounded accusations of dictatorship. The fact that Chávez, still commanding close to 60% popular support, is again trying to convince the Venezuelan people to overturn the US-style two-term limit on his job will only intensify such charges, even though the change would merely bring the country into line with the rules in France and Britain.

But it is a response which also utterly fails to grasp the significance of the wave of progressive change that has swept away the old elites and brought a string of radical socialist and social-democratic governments to power across the continent, from Ecuador to Brazil, Paraguay to Argentina: challenging US domination and neoliberal orthodoxy, breaking down social and racial inequality, building regional integration and taking back strategic resources from corporate control.

(click here to view entire article)



Tuesday, 6 January 2009

Hugo Chavez, the FARC Laptops, and the Non-Existent Emails

[While UK and US government officials, NGOs and media outlets rushed to comment on alleged emails showing extensive collaboration between the leadership of the FARC rebel group and representatives of the Venezuelan president, Hugo Chavez, they have shown a reluctance to comment on the the fact that according to the Colombian government-appointed investigator, Captain Ronald Coy, no emails ever existed.]

Hugo Chavez, the FARC Laptops, and the Non-Existent Emails