Free Speech is
Alive and Well in Venezuela
By: Greg Grandin, AlterNet
Posted on June 22, 2007, Printed on June 22, 2007
For the original story, see: http://www.alternet.org/story/54645/
The government of Venezuela decided not to renew
a broadcast license for RCTV, one of the oldest and largest
opposition-controlled TV stations in the country, when its
20-year term expired on May 27. The US media, in keeping with
its reporting on Venezuela for the last 8 years, has seized
upon this opportunity to portray this as an assault on "freedom
of the press."
It's not clear why a TV station that would never get a broadcast
license in the United States or any other democratic country
should receive one in Venezuela. But this is the one question
that doesn't seem to come up in any of the news reports or
editorials here.
RCTV actively participated in the U.S.-backed coup that briefly
overthrew Venezuela's democratically elected President Hugo
Chavez in 2002. The station promoted the coup government,
reported only the pro-coup version of events. It censored
and suppressed the news as the coup fell apart.
Even ignoring RCTV's role in the coup, its broadcast license
would have been revoked years ago in the U.S., Europe, or
any country that regulates the public airwaves. During the
oil strike of 2002-2003, the station repeatedly called on
people to join in and help topple the government. The station
has also fabricated accusations of murder by the government,
using graphic and violent images to promote its hate-filled
views.
The whole idea that freedom of expression is under attack
in Venezuela is a joke to anyone who has been there in the
last eight years. Most of the media in Venezuela is still
controlled by people who are vehemently (sometimes violently)
opposed to the government. This will be true even after RCTV
switches from broadcast to cable and satellite media. All
over the broadcast media you can hear denunciations of the
president and the government of the kind that you would not
hear in the United States on a major national broadcast network.
Imagine Rush Limbaugh during the Clinton impeachment, times
fifty, but with much less regard for factual accuracy.
Pick up a newspaper -- El Universal and El Nacional are two
of the biggest -- and the vast majority of the headlines are
trying to make the government look bad. Turn on the radio
and most of what you will hear is also anti-government. Television
now has two state-run channels, but these only counterbalance
the rest of the programming that is opposition-controlled.
Venezuela has a more oppositional media than we have in the
United States.
In fact, if the government carries through on its promise
to turn RCTV's broadcast frequency over to the public, for
a diverse array of programming, then this move will actually
increase freedom of expression in Venezuela - rather than
suppressing it, as the media and some opportunistic, ill-informed
politicians here have maintained.
Sadly, some human rights officials here have also, without
knowing much of the details, jumped on the media and political
bandwagon. In a press release this week, Josi Miguel Vivanco,
Americas director at Human Rights Watch, said that "The
move to shut down RCTV is a serious blow to freedom of expression
in Venezuela." (Of course RCTV will not be "shut
down," since it can continue to distribute its programs
through cable and satellite media).
But in an interview the same week Vivanco gave a different
view, criticizing "those who claim that the fact that
the Chavez government is not renewing the license for RCTV,
per se implies a violation of freedom of expression. That
is nonsense. . . you are not entitled, as a private company,
to get your contract renewed with the government forever."
So why is a station that has repeatedly violated the most
basic rules of any broadcast license entitled to another 20-year
state-sanctioned franchise?
It is not surprising that a monopolized media here would defend
the "right" of right-wing media moguls to control
the airwaves in Venezuela. Still it would be nice if we could
get both sides of the story here - like Venezuelans do from
their major media, which is right now saturated with broadcasts
and articles against (as well as for) the government's decision.
Then Americans could make up their own minds about whether
this is really a "free speech" issue. Is that really
too much to ask from our own "free press?"
Greg Grandin teaches Latin American history at New York
University and is the author of a number of books, including
the just published Empire's Workshop: Latin America, the United
States, and the Rise of the New Imperialism.
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