Some non-news items

There was a period a few months ago when there were many alternative and decent journalists in Iraq: Dahr Jamail (who is still there), Rahul Mahajan, Andrea Schmidt, Naomi Klein, and others. This coincided with the US invasion of Fallujah and a tremendous amount of news coverage of Iraq everywhere. Today though, there isn’t as much coverage of what’s going on. Alternative media (notably Dahr) are still there, there are still reports coming out on Iraq, but somehow, it isn’t dominating the news. And yet it seems like there is as much happening there as ever. The body count has certainly not abated, as the insurgents mount bombing attacks and the US forces continue to slaughter their way through civilian areas, including Fallujah.

Things seem to be happening in Afghanistan, a place that never made much news even when it was being invaded by the US and can hardly make news now that it’s only occupied, starving, and has insurgents making moves against the occupiers.

The last non-news item is Israel/Palestine, which is going through one of those periods of ‘calm’ when only Palestinians are being killed. There is a compilation of assassinations of Palestinians by Israel for September to April. The Israelis killed another two people, ‘suspected militants’ as the saying goes, in Nablus in an assassination with a car bomb on June 15. I read somewhere that the Israeli secret service conducted an assassination in Jenin earlier this week as well, though I haven’t been able to track down the source.

UN kicks down another Haitian door!

Showing their deep concern about armed factions in Haiti Canadians under the US mission in Haiti kicked down another Haitian door, this time of Dany Toussaint, a politician, and recovering some weapons.

Maybe they’ll do something about the heavy weapons the coup makers got in order to overthrow Aristide’s regime a few months back. Oh — wait — where did those weapons come from again? Hmmm… Stan Goff has some ideas.

In other Haitian door kicking news, ZNet’s posted an article by Haiti Action activists on the raid on the mayor of Milo by the UN troops, blogged here previously. Between these and the arrest of Lavalas activist and grandmother Annette Auguste, the UN is compiling an impressive record of raiding.

No doubt Haitians are feeling very safe.

Technicality: the troops conducting the raid on Dany Toussaint were Canadian, and none of the Canadian politicians said anything about it, so this will serve as the Fear and Loathing Report today.

Note 2: I just got a note from Justin Felux, who has written very good stuff on Haiti for ZNet (take a look at it on ZNet’s Haiti Watch) about the victim of this raid. It seems that the UN’s raids on So Anne and Mayor Moise were different from this one…

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Justin,

Dany Toussaint is a thug that has probably been an asset of the CIA for a long time. Haiti would be better off if those Canadian troops had shot him. While Toussaint has pretended to be a supporter of Lavalas since the 1991 coup, he has shown his true colors over the past few years.

In the 1980s he received training at the SOA and was a member of the hated Haitian military. When Washington restored Aristide in 1994, they were pushing Toussaint as one of Haiti’s new leaders. They clearly saw him as someone that would be useful to them in the future. The CIA made several overtures toward him in the late 1990s.

Toussaint was behind the murder of journalist Jean Dominique, and his gangs have been stirring up trouble in Port-au-prince for years now. This has all resulted in a lot of chaos and destabilization, as well as a fracturing of Lavalas, which is probably what it was designed to do.

Since then Toussaint has openly aligned himself with the opposition and has a close working relationship with Guy Philippe.

A Minor Victory In A Major Struggle (C.P. Pandya)

Open up markets or else. This is often the ultimatum governments of developing countries are given as they try to find a way out of severe poverty and economic stagnation. This “development” is anything but and has always come at a very very costly human price: death, displacement and deeper poverty. This is to say nothing of the real agendas motivating the U.S. and other industrialized countries to promote this form of gun-point development.

This week, Ecuador’s congress sent out a message that it will not give in to such outside pressures as it seeks to develop. On June 16, it rejected proposed legislation to open up government-owned oil fields in the Amazon to foreign oil companies. President Lucio Gutierrez, who came to office on a left platform, pushed to open up the oil fields for nearly two years in reaction to an IMF mandate stating that without such “reforms” of the oil sector, the agency would withhold $120 million in “aid.”

Among the international oil companies who pushed hard for the “reforms” were Occidental Petroleum of the U.S., Canada’s EnCana Corp., Brazil’s Petroleo Brasileiro and Spanish-Argentine giant Repsol – all of which would have gained supremely had the fields been opened up. The dismissal of the legislation came as a shock to foreign investors, who are used to getting their way when it comes to matters of “development.” Any subscription-free links to this fascinating story would be much-appreciated.

One last thought: Perhaps the country’s dealings with the deadly legacy ChevronTexaco left behind prompted the congressional vote this week.

FARC and the massacre at La Gabarra

Following up on yesterday’s post on the massacre at La Gabarra. As I suggested, the place to go to find FARC’s views is ANNCOL and they have a statement now on their site, taking responsibility for what happened, claiming that everyone they killed were paramilitaries, and accusing the Colombian government, the ‘bourgeois press’, and the human rights organizations of crying ‘crocodile tears’. Uribe took the opportunity to denounce human rights organizations generally, and specifically Amnesty International, who responded publicly to the President’s filthy accusations.

Required reading on Israel/Palestine

From two days ago, a piece by Greg Philo containing excerpts and summary from a book of the same name, Bad News from Israel, is just a must-read. The degree to which people are deliberately propagandized in the West on this issue is amazing, and this is the first book that systematically studies the process. Chomsky’s Fateful Triangle tears the arguments apart, and is equally indispensable, but the work of Philo et al. has a different program and does it very well. Read the essay, get the book.

What else in West Asia? It seems another Palestinian Prime Minister has bitten the dust, or wants to, anyway. It’s hard to know what a Palestinian PM can really do, hard not to understand why successive ones keep resigning. The only mystery is that they can still find people to take the job. Someone at IMEMC has taken the trouble to do a body count in one town in Gaza over the past two weeks: 13 dead, 82 wounded. I have a picture from the same town of the aftermath of Israel’s war against oranges in the region. There was also another assassination of a high-profile Palestinian leader in Jenin.

In the realm of speculation, there is a chilling line from Fisk’s latest article on ‘the war on learning’ in Iraq. The article begins:

“The Mongols stained the Tigris black with the ink of the Iraqi books they destroyed. Today’s Mongols prefer to destroy the Iraqi teachers of books.

“Since the Anglo-American invasion, they have murdered at least 13 academics at the University of Baghdad alone and countless others across Iraq. History professors, deans of college and Arabic tutors have all fallen victim to the war on learning. Only six weeks ago – virtually unreported, of course – the female dean of the college of law in Mosul was beheaded in her bed, along with her husband.”

Fisk recalls the strange and still unexplained looting of the museums in Baghdad. Here’s the really chilling part.

“Other university staff suspect that there is a campaign to strip Iraq of its academics, to complete the destruction of Iraq’s cultural identity which began with the destruction of the Baghdad Koranic library, the national archives and the looting of the archaeological museum when the American army entered Baghdad.

“Maybe the Kuwaitis want to take their revenge for what we did to them in 1991,” a lecturer said. “Maybe the Israelis are trying to make sure that we can never have an intellectual infrastructure here.”

FLR: As Conservatives head for a majority…

Naomi Klein had a good piece in the Globe and Mail about the international consequences of a Conservative victory yesterday. It was similar to what I wrote in this blog about a week ago. Canadians should read it, carefully. Here’s a quote — not the most moving in it, but a good summary quote:

It is a privilege not to be hated for your nationality, and we should not relinquish it lightly. George Bush has denied that privilege to his own people, and Stephen Harper would cavalierly strip it from Canadians by erasing what few small but important differences remain between Canadian and U.S. foreign policy. The danger posed by this act is not just about whether Canadians are safe when we travel to the Middle East. The hatred that Mr. Bush is manufacturing there, for the United States and its coalition partners, is already following the soldiers home.

The hawks in Washington like to paint Canada as a freeloader, mooching off their expensive military protection, the continent’s weak link on terrorism. The truth is that around the world, it is blind government complicity with U.S. foreign policy, precisely the kind of complicity advocated by Mr. Harper, that is putting civilians in the line of terror. It is the United States that is the weak link.

I have often wondered about the maxim that “a people gets the government they deserve.” In the third world that ought to be modified to something like: “a people gets the government the United States installs or the murderous criminals the United States uses to try to overthrow the government the people wanted or never even wanted in the first place because it too had been installed by the United States or some previous imperial power.” But in the first world there really are choices — constrained ones, for many, but there are choices. It is usually other people who suffer the most for the choices first worlders make, but it does seem that Canadians are about to make a truly conscious choice to “relinquish the privilege of not being hated for their nationality”, to say nothing of other privileges won in decades of struggle. One of the most repugnant phrases in the whole televised debate series was seeing these politicians ask each other: “Will you take no responsibility for that, sir?” Out of their mouths, it seemed rather ridiculous.

And yet. It seems to me that Canadians have more choices than most people in this world. So maybe we should ask each other. “Will you take no responsibility for that, sir?”

Caterpillar’s Complicity (C.P. Pandya)

Readers of the “Killing Train” have no doubt stared long and hard at the picture of the razed Palestinian home that shamefully graces the top of this blog. It therefore seems only appropriate that my inaugural entry be news on the company that provides Israel with the machinery it uses to pulverize Palestinian homes, farmland and lives. A United Nations advisor sent a letter to Caterpillar, the bulldozer-maker based in Peoria, Illinois, saying that sales of its bulldozers to Israel are tantamount to complicity in Israeli human rights abuses against the Palestinians.

Caterpillar, which sold $24.4 billion worth of bulldozers and other heavy machinery last year, seems unphased. CEO James Owens didn’t bother to respond to the letter, but in a letter to the parents of Rachel Corrie, the ISM activist killed by a Caterpillar bulldozer in Gaza, he said his company does not have “the practical ability – or the legal right – to determine how our products are used after they are sold.”

Perhaps the company just knows that it will protected by the Bush administration. The administration chose Owens as one of 12 corporate executives who will sit on the newly created Manufacturing Council, an advisory board that, according to Commerce Secretary Don Evans, will provide “manufacturers with a permanent seat at the policy table.”

CP Pandya’s window on the corporate world

Some time ago I co-wrote a commentary with CP Pandya on the Venezuelan government’s economic policies. It was a useful piece because I was able to supply some historical context and some information about Venezuela itself, while CP was able to provide a view as a business observer. I believe it is a sign of our success that we managed to draw a rather hysterical, unintentionally ironic, and somewhat amusing critique from a member of the Venezuelan opposition.

CP’s work more generally provides analysis and insight on corporate doings and depredations, with information that only very close watchers of the business press have. Combined with a radical perspective, this is very useful, and I believe complementary to my own approach. As readers know by now, I spend very little time or energy reading the mainstream North American press — I use alternative and foreign sources and connections. But I value the insights of good mainstream press watchers, which is what most of the z bloggers and friends are. CP’s particular focus on the details of corporate dirt adds something to the picture, which is why I am glad to see that CP will be blogging here, in the new ‘Corporate World’ section opening up on the killing train. It only makes sense, since capitalism is such a major contributor to the train…

Another major massacre in Colombia

Today’s El Tiempo headline is about a massacre of 34 peasants in the Colombian department of Norte de Santander. The peasants were apparently ‘raspachines’, those campesinos who occupy the lowest rung of the agricultural economy, harvesting coca leaf for small wages. They were doing this harvesting in a paramilitary-controlled zone. Survivors, quoted in El Tiempo, say it was done by the 33rd front of FARC. A very pro-FARC perspective can be found at the ANNCOL website. I went there looking for either a claim of responsibility, an apology, or an angry denial of the smear campaign accusing them of the massacre, but nothing so far.

The truth is, the strategy of the war, increasingly adopted by the FARC, is to kill civilian ‘supporters’ or ‘sympathizers’ rather than combatants — in this case, as Wilson Borja (a very decent member of the Colombian Congress) said, they killed poor peasants who were victims of the whole system long before they were killed — in his words, “those who benefit least from the illicit business”.