Fw: [NYTr] El Pais Slings Mud at Che, Hugo Chavez, then Demands Royalties for Fair-Use Quote Date: Sat, 1 Dec 2007 03:41:02 -0600 (CST) Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit [The translation here is not great, but readers will get the gist. Edited by NY Transfer] Granma Daily - Nov 28, 2007 http://www.granma.cubaweb.cu/english/news/art82.html Pay or Be Censored El PaC-s Newspaper and its Latest Disguise By ROLANDO PEREZ BETANCOURT With a facade of a progressive newspaper, sometimes on the left side (provided the left is not in power), an advocate of "balanced opinions" and of "international projection" in its public image, the Spanish newspaper "El PaC-s" has been categorical with journalist Pascual Serrano: either you pay or I censor you. Serrano wrote an article published on the Spanish language website RebeliC3n at http://www.rebelion.org that shows, once again, that the journalistic practices of El PaC-s are far from the image it projects. "From Teheran, Caracas, Managua, Madrid, London; in its editorial, front page, press magazine and in its Sunday supplement, all the artillery of El PaC-s in its November 18 edition opened coordinated fire on Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, following the same military order," Serrano said. Serranobs report revealed another eruption of a long and not in the least "balanced" neoconservative campaign, mounted by El PaC-s against the governments of Cuba, Venezuela, Bolivia and Nicaragua. It was the same kind of media crusade that detonated in October. After the publication of an editorial entitled "Caudillo Guevara," the workers of the El Pais editorial staff demanded that a disclaimer be published expressing their dissatisfaction with it. It was an editorial full of insults on the occasion of the 40th anniversary of the assassination of Ernesto "Che" Guevara in Bolivia, and, as one of that newspaper's readers wrote, "therebs no need to have been a Guevara follower in the past or be one today to consider your editorial note of yesterday ('Caudillo Guevara,' El PaC-s, 10-10-2007) an insult to the intelligence and sensitivity, another example of the bauthorized by the police and banned by logicb kind of discourse Karl Marx used to talk about." Another offended reader wrote to the newspaper, "Ibm Spanish, and a long-time reader of 'El PaC-s.' Itbs sad, but the editorial does not surprise me. Itbs the result of the newspaperbs evident swing to the right, aimed not only at conservative readers but also citizens with a purchasing power that is simply unimaginable in Spain." And what does the editorial say to provoke its readersb immediate reaction? Reading one paragraph is enough to see its intentions: "Actually, behind the willingness to give onebs life for onebs ideals lies a sinister purpose: the readiness to take the lives of people who donbt share them. Ernesto Guevara, Che, who died 40 years ago in the Bolivian town of La Higuera, belongs to that sinister saga of tragic heroes, still alive in new-style terrorist movements, from nationalists to jihadists, who try to hide his being an assassin under that of a martyr, extending the old prejudice inherited from romanticism." Yet, Pascual Serranobs article in RebeliC3n was not referring to that editorial but to the bugle sound of slaughter coming from the pages of El PaC-s against President Chavez. "Itbs not that the Venezuelan president was front-page news; he was the focus of three news items: one on the Spanish King after the incident at the Santiago de Chile Summit; the Sunday special that includes a picture with the title 'Why doesnbt he shut up?' and the subtitle 'Hugo Chavez uses incident with the King as a means to consolidate his power,' an the article by Vargas Llosa entitled 'The Commander and the King,' which, of course, tackles the same issue. About Vargas Llosa we already know that, while remaining a popular novelist, he has become a manipulator of ideological interests and, every now and then, a not-so-elegant journalist. But he has readers. Some, happy to find in his analytical pieces the sort of conservative ancestry matured throughout the years that insists on turning old hatreds into veracities by using inflammatory adjectives. He says in the hastily written article published by "El PaC-s," "The most evident and immediate lesson of this psychodrama is that today therebs still an anachronistic, demagogic, uncultured, and barbarian Latin America. To try to incorporate it into the civilized, democratic and modernizing entity Ibero-American Summits seeks to be is just a waste of time and money. This will be an impossible aspiration as long as there are Latin American countries that have people like Chavez, Ortega or Evo Morales as rulers, not to mention Fidel Castro. The fact that they are or have been popular and won elections does not make them democrats." In his article, Pascual Serrano makes reference to Vargas Llosa: "[Against Chavez] they had an international and national report, an analyst of international politics, an editorial and a magazine article. Now the shots came from a prestigious writer, nonw other than Vargas LLosa." And to highlight the antipathy that moves the Peruvian-Spanish writer to join El PaC-s against President Chavez, Serrano quoted a few lines -- prose worth analyzing as more proof of the fact that political phobia can turn an excellent writer into the author of intemperance and personal attacks. In view of Pascual Serranobs criticism, comes a reaction that exudes the newspaper managementbs arrogance, informing Serrano by email that they have "the INTERNATIONAL rights to MARIO VARGAS LLOSAbs column." And they rebuke: "You have two options: either you immediately remove it from your page or you pay [a royalty."] The threat is puerile and lacks legal support, since it is not a complete reproduction, but rather quotes, a practice used by media around the world every day. But the arrogance continued despite the evidence and El PaC-s insisted: "either you remove it or you pay for it." Pascual Serrano has been categorical in his response, "Neither RebeliC3n.org nor I are the least bit interested in spreading the texts of Mario Vargas LLosa, neither paying nor without paying for them. His essays are only useful as El PaC-s ammunition to criticize progressive governments in Latin America." "The newspaper article and its subsequent insistence, stresses Serrano, is absolutely paranoid, without legal foundation and can only be explained as an attempt to intimidate and pressure RebeliC3n.org and its articles from legally and respectfully criticizing :El PaC-sb" editorial and its misleading information policy. "Neither I nor RebeliC3n.org are going to remove that article, much less pay the newspaper for the right to criticize it." This, letbs make it clear, will hardly represent economic bankruptcy for "El PaC-s" or for Mario Vargas Llosa, because, after all, new cunning ways of investing in the field of journalism, inside or outside the paperbs faC'ade of being "global and progressive" are bound to come. * ================================================================= NY Transfer News Collective * A Service of Blythe Systems Since 1985 - Information for the Rest of Us Our main website: http://www.blythe.org List Archives: http://blythe-systems.com/pipermail/nytr/ Subscribe: http://blythe-systems.com/mailman/listinfo/nytr =================================================================