OCTOBER 30, 2019
Grayzone editor Max
Blumenthal, a prominent journalistic critic of US policy toward
Venezuela, was arrested by DC police on Friday, October 25, in connection
with a protest at the Venezuelan embassy, and held incommunicado. But if you
rely on corporate media, or even leading “press freedom” groups, you haven’t
heard about this troubling encroachment on freedom of the press.
Blumenthal is a bestselling
author whose work has appeared in such publications as the New
York Times, CJR, The Nation and Salon. DC police
arrested him at his home on a five-month-old arrest warrant, charging him with
simple assault for his attempt to deliver food to the besieged Venezuelan
embassy; he was held for two days, and for the first 36 hours was not allowed
to speak with a lawyer. (In an interview with FAIR, Blumenthal noted that
keeping arrestees—generally poor and African-American—from speaking with
lawyers or family is par for the course in the DC criminal justice system.) As
of this writing, there has been no mention of Blumenthal’s arrest in outlets
like the New York Times, Washington Post and Reuters that
constantly publish Venezuela-related content, or by the big “press freedom”
NGOs.
When freelance US journalist
Cody Weddle was detained in Venezuela for 12 hours, it made headlines in
the New York Times (3/6/19), Washington
Post (3/6/19), Miami
Herald (3/6/19), USA
Today (3/6/19), Guardian (3/6/19),
UK Telegraph (3/6/19), NPR (3/10/19), ABC (3/9/19)
and Reuters (3/7/19).
That’s not exhaustive, but you get the picture.
In Weddle’s case, the human
rights industry also responded immediately. Jose Miguel Vivanco of Human Rights
Watch tweeted about
Cody Weddle’s detention, as did Reporters without
Borders (RSF). The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) also put out
a statement immediately
(3/6/19).
There has been nothing from them about Blumenthal.
The two-hour
detention of Univision’s Jorge Ramos in Venezuela was
likewise big news.
In fact, RSF was outraged that Cody Weddle’s detention happened “barely a week”
after the Ramos incident.
Nobody should have a problem
with Weddle’s arrest or Ramos’ detention getting the widespread attention they
did. (The content in the reports about Venezuela is a separate issue.) What
should anger anybody who isn’t consumed with hypocrisy is the point Ben Norton,
writing in Grayzone (10/28/19),
made about Blumenthal’s arrest:
If this had happened to a
journalist in Venezuela, every Western human rights NGO and news wire would be
howling about Maduro’s authoritarianism. It will be revealing to see how these
same elements react to a clear-cut case of political repression in their own
backyard.
Blumenthal’s arrest is another
example of the legal harassment of US government critics, including WikiLeaks’
Julian Assange and whistleblower Chelsea Manning–whose plights have similarly
been neglected by Western media and NGOs that claim to support press freedom (FAIR.org, 11/3/18, 4/1/19).
Several months ago, activists
invited by the Venezuela government stayed in
the Venezuelan embassy in Washington, DC, for over a month until they were
finally evicted by police on May 24. The presence of the activists delayed a
takeover of the embassy by representatives of the Trump-appointed Venezuelan
government-in-exile led by Juan Guaidó. The majority of the world’s governments
do not recognize Guaidó; that was dramatically highlighted on October 17 when
Venezuela’s was voted
onto the UN Human Rights Council despite US “lobbying” (i.e., bribes
and threats).
Nevertheless, Trump’s
recognition of Guaidó in January 2019 was the excuse for intensifying economic
sanctions that had already killed
thousands of people by the end of 2018. (Incidentally, Jorge Ramos’
two-hour “detention” also received more Western media attention than the study
showing the already-lethal impact of Trump’s sanctions—FAIR.org, 6/14/19).
With the complicity of DC
police, Guaidó supporters tried to block food from being delivered to the
embassy during the standoff with the activists. At one point, 78-year-old Jesse
Jackson Sr. had to
scuffle with Guaidó supporters to deliver food. The DC police were
clearly intent on doing as little as possible, even with an elderly,
high-profile visitor trying to make a delivery. Former Green Party
candidate Ajamu Baraka (age
66) was forced to act as Jackson’s bodyguard, thanks to the aggression of
Guaidó supporters and the inaction of DC police.
Norton reported:
Court documents indicate the
false charge of simple assault stems from Blumenthal’s participation in a
delivery of food and sanitary supplies to peace activists and journalists
inside the Venezuelan embassy on May 8, 2019.
Others attempting to deliver
food were hit with charges months ago. Activist Ben Rubenstein and Veterans
for Peace president Gary Condon (age 72) were beaten by police during
the standoff for trying to toss a cucumber to activists inside the embassy. In
fact, the warrant against Blumenthal was months old, and apparently initially
rejected. Blumenthal explained:
If the government had at least
told me I had a warrant I could have voluntarily surrendered and appeared at my
own arraignment…. Instead, the federal government essentially enlisted the DC
police to SWAT me, ensuring that I would be subjected to an early morning raid
and then languish in prison for days without even the ability to call an
attorney.
The lack of coverage of his
arrest “is totally consistent with media coverage of the siege of the
Venezuelan embassy,” Blumenthal told FAIR. “The violence, racism, sexism of the
Venezuelan opposition—none of it was reported in the mainstream US press.”
Aside from alternative outlets like Democracy Now! (10/30/19)
and the World Socialist Website (10/30/19),
one had to turn to Russian
state media to find coverage of Blumenthal’s arrest. A Sputnik article
(10/30/19)
about the case cited damaging exposés Grayzone has
published about Guaidó inner circle, one of which recently led to the resignation of
right-wing economist Ricardo Hausmann from Guaidó’s shadow administration.
Here’s an idea for media
outlets and NGOs concerned about
the appeal of Russian public relations efforts: start doing your jobs by
holding your own authoritarian politicians and politicized police forces to
account.
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