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Write in protest
to Channel 4 via their website at (a long address):
http://help.channel4.com/SRVS/CGI-BIN/WEBCGI.EXE?New,Kb=C4_Author,Company={2EA1BB9C-510E-44A5-A481-01EB1DDA1669},T=CONTACT_VE,VARSET_TITLE=General
There may also be another more specific address
screened after the programme, for example inviting comments on a message
board, so look out for it and post your comments there too.
Or you can phone Channel 4 at 08450 76 0191.
Channel 4 “Unreported World: Haiti” – a nasty
piece of embedded journalism
Selma James, on behalf of the Global Women’s
Strike
The truly heroic struggle of the people of Haiti –
first against their slavery which their revolution abolished in
1804, decades before abolition in other
countries; then against a “debt” imposed by France for its loss of
property after the slaves drove Napoleon’s army out; and then against a
series of dictatorships and military occupations – has been hidden or
lied about in the most spectacular and racist way.
Your programme, “Unreported
World: Haiti”, was another example, a piece of US-UN propaganda. It is
disinformation like this which has been used to justify the 2004 US-led
coup against the elected government of President Jean-Bertrand
Aristide.
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While mentioning that Haiti
is the poorest country in the Western hemisphere, there was not a
hint of the US military invasions and Western-backed dictatorships
(the most notorious was that of Duvalier and his son Baby Doc) which
have caused such poverty, making a way for sweatshops and anti-union
policing.
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There was no mention of the
2004 US invasion, which led to the present-day occupation by UN
troops.
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No mention of President
Aristide’s anti-poverty policies which made him so well-loved and
supported by the great majority of the population. Yet it is
because Cité Soleil has been a working class stronghold of support
for Aristide that it is so brutality targeted first by the US, then
by the UN.
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You interviewed the owner of
a sweatshop that was forced to close but said nothing of wages and
working conditions there, the fact that Aristide had tripled wages,
funded schools and hospitals, and was hated by the Haitian elite
which runs such sweatshops.
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There was no mention of the
convicted drug dealers and torturers the US had armed to defeat the
popular movement which voted Aristide into power, resist the coup
and still demand his return.
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No history of how the
“gangs” came into existence and who has armed them.
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No mention of the record of
repression of the Brazilian military (which make up the majority of
the present UN force in Haiti) in Brazil’s own favelas.
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No mention of the dissident
Brazilian general who previously headed the UN troops in Haiti and
was either killed or committed suicide because he disagreed with the
murderous policies he was asked to implement there.
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You did not say that the UN
has been accused of killing thousands of people in Cité Soleil and
elsewhere. You reported that while you were there the UN was
shooting in a densely populated area at night and that two little
girls were shot dead. You described their injuries. You interviewed
their father who said the UN had shot them. You filmed the protest
against this killing of Cité Soleil residents, many of them women
and children, who marched to the UN headquarters in protest. You
showed the demonstrators being shot at indiscriminately by the UN.
Your own team was shot at by the UN and your cameraman was hit. Yet
the UN was not held responsible for the escalating violence in Cité
Soleil, the “gangs” were. This is like saying that there was a
violent conflict in Iraq without mentioning the US-UK occupation.
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In
Rwanda the UN stood by while nearly a million people were
slaughtered to death. In Bosnia and elsewhere they were told they
could only use arms in self-defence. But in Haiti they have been
told by the US, which has been in charge there since their marines
invaded, to “clear” Cité Soleil and other strongholds of resistance.
Your programme said nothing about this unusually aggressive UN
intervention.
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You ended the programme by
claiming that the UN had displaced some “gangs” and set up food
distribution and health clinics. Had your reporter looked rather
than taken the UN’s word for it, you would have seen that such
distribution centres are nothing but a temporary smokescreen
(lasting no more than a day) for the much more permanent repression.
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Your reporter dramatised
herself by appearing to be at the heart of the action, moving with
the UN troops. This is the same kind of embedded reporting we have
seen of the Iraq war – an advertisement for murderous US policies.
Journalism such as this shares much of the blame for the WMD and
other lies which helped make way for the ’shock and awe’ invasion of
Iraq.
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If the gangs of Cité Soleil
have such disregard for people’s lives, one wonders why President
Chávez of Venezuela was welcomed with such warmth, especially by the
inhabitants of Cité Soleil, when he visited recently. Unlike the
UN, he was not in an armoured vehicle and he brought much needed
resources, not guns.
The Global Women’s Strike (GWS) and Women of Colour
in the GWS have been working with Haitian women, children and men who
have been opposing the US coup and the UN occupation, both in Haiti and
elsewhere. We have supported schools that grassroots women have
organised to educate and feed children in their devastated communities,
worked for CARICOM and Venezuela not to recognise the dictatorship
imposed by the US in 2004, organised speaking tours for grassroots women
and men to address audiences in the US... This year for the first time
women in Haiti held an event as part of GWS actions for 8 March,
International Women’s Day.
As the widow and colleague of CLR James – whose
acknowledged masterpiece The Black Jacobins describes the
extraordinary achievements of the Haitian revolution which celebrated
its 200th anniversary shortly before the coup – I was
particularly offended by your report. It was based on ignorant and
careless reporting, misrepresented the facts, was obeisant to the
occupying force, and lacked respect and understanding for the people who
have been paying with their lives for their determined resistance to the
occupation. We protest this nasty piece of embedded journalism
demeaning the struggle of a heroic people.
Haiti
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