Armin Medosch on Tue, 26 Nov 96 15:31 MET |
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Re: nettime: report from belgrad |
Hello nettimers, I am really glad about this report from Belgrade, especially since the big german newspapers don�t write about it. Today in "Sueddeutsche Zeitung", which is the biggest "quality" newspaper in Germany there was only a ten line article. Titled "Biggest demonstrations against Milosevic since 1991" it writes in a very vague way about the whole thing, letting it look like some students demonstrations. Also the manipulation of election results by the government are not reported as fact but as "said to be". On the same page there is a rather big article about former Turkish President Ylmaz being beaten on his nose in Hungary. For me this shows that "Western Democratic Media" are not really that democratic or that free, but rather selective. Disinformation can also be created by focusing on some topics and on others not. I don�t understand, why big Western media like Sueddeutsche Zeitung don�t report in big style about the struggle of Serbian people against anit-democrat powers, but probably they have some reason. Also the media in Germany didn�t complain much about Tudjman ignoring/suppressing the results of the Zagreb elections. So maybe the reason is that the Germans want the Serbians always look like the bad guys. A self-conscious people�s revolt doesn�t fit into that picture maybe. Or there are any strange deals with Milosevic behind the scene. The same journal Sueddeutsche Zeitung also didn�t report any background information about the riots in Indonesia that summer. All you got to know was, that there is an opposition and ther was some fighting, how many people were injured or killed and taken to prison and that most of them (?!?) were released from jail a few days later. But it was never told that the father of the opposition leader was a democratically elected President who was overthrown by a military coup by the now still governing dictator and that this action was supported by the CIA and could happen while the world was fixated on the war in Palaestina in 67 (source: Noam Chomsky, Power and Economy). Without this background nobody could know how bad it was for the opposition that the daughter of the former president can now not be a candidate for the elections next year in Indonesia because she was removed from the head of the only opposition party through this government intervention. At the same time Indonesia is considered a "very interesting market" and German companies like Telekom and Siemens are doing very good business there. The German state itself sold between 20 and 30 military landing boats (from former East German Navy) to Indonesia. These boats are ideally fitting for invasions of Islands like East-Timor (but this is not the only suppressed region in Indonesia) because they can call at sandy beaches and spit out light tanks and armed troops trhough a front hatch. Also these boats are extremely fast, making 60 knots. When the German Government was attacked by (not too many) journalists about the sale of these boats they defended themselves by saying that all weapons were dismantled from the boats. Anyway its easy to install new weapons and better ones then the outdated east german/russian rocket throwers. So what Chomsky says in "Power and Economy", that bringing democracy to the world is not really the goal of the West, can be found true in the case of Indonesia. It seems to be more interesting for the West to have a strange kind of "stability" even if this means to support totalitarian regimes, because this stability - which is often a stability of graveyards - protects Western investments. The role of media - and not just the real cheap mass media but also the so called quality newspapers - seems to be to find excuses for the acting of governments and multinationals and to spread disinformation by leading the attention of people in the own country to other topics at a given moment. These are examples for information controll, not totalitarian controll but self controll of capitalist newspapers (or is there a state influence that we cant see). It is something that makes me very angry for a long time also because it is so hard to proof how these things are done purposely. Without well recherched backgrounds it often stays very nebulous what is really going on. So I have no clue why German mass media are not reporting about what happens in Serbia right now. Maybe somebody can help me. Armin Medosch > -- > * distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission > * <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, > * collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets > * more info: [email protected] and "info nettime" in the msg body > * URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: [email protected] -- * distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission * <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, * collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets * more info: [email protected] and "info nettime" in the msg body * URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: [email protected]