http://english.pravda.ru/hotspots/disasters/28-01-2010/111894-US_media_blocks_news-0


28.01.2010
U.S. Media Blocks News on Aid from Cuba to Haiti

By Dave Lindorff, in Rebelión



In the critical early days after the earthquake that struck Haiti, only two 
North American news agencies reported the rapid Cuban response to the crisis. 
One was Fox News, which wrongly stated that the Cubans were absent from the 
list of neighboring Caribbean countries that had provided assistance.

The other half was The Christian Science Monitor (a respected news agency that 
recently closed its print edition), which reported, correctly, that Cuba sent 
30 doctors to Haiti.

The Christian Science Monitor, in a second paper, citing Laurence Korb, a 
former deputy defense secretary and current member of the Center for American 
Progress, said that the U.S., who led relief efforts in Haiti should "think 
about utilizing the knowledge of neighboring Cuba." He also noted that they 
"have some of the best doctors in the world - we should try sending them to 
Haiti."

With regard to other media in the U.S., Cuba is simply ignored. In fact, they 
omitted and failed to inform that Cuba already had about 400 doctors, 
paramedics and other health professionals sent to Haiti to assist in day-to-day 
health needs of the poorest country in the Americas, and that these 
professionals were the first to respond to the disaster by erecting a hospital, 
just next to the main hospital in Port au Prince that was toppled by the 
earthquake, as well as a second hospital in another part of town.

Far from "doing nothing" after the disaster, as the propaganda wing Fox-TV, 
Cuba has been one of the countries that responded more efficiently and 
crucially in this crisis, because even before the earthquake they had created a 
medical infrastructure that was able to mobilize quickly to immediately begin 
treating the victims.

As might be expected, the North American emergency response has focused 
primarily, at least in terms of personnel and money, to send the enormously 
expensive and inefficient military machine - a fleet of aircraft and an 
aircraft carrier - a factor that should be taken into account when considering 
the $100 million that the Obama administration says it has designated for 
emergency aid to Haiti.

Given that the cost of operating an aircraft carrier, including crew, is 
approximately $ 2 million a day, only to send a company to Haiti for two weeks, 
will consume one quarter of the promised North American aid and although many 
of the soldiers sent in to work certainly helps, distributing and guarding 
supplies, the long history of brutal military / colonial control of Haiti, 
inevitably leads to fear that other soldiers have the task of ensuring the 
survival and control of the pro-US elite Haitian political parasites.

Moreover, the U.S. has ignored the day-to-day ongoing humanitarian crisis in 
Haiti, while Cuba has done the job of providing basic health care.

Not that it was difficult to find Cubans in Port au Prince. Democracy Now! had 
a report, as did the magazine Noticias de Cuba, with headquarters in 
Washington. What happens is that after the proud Communist good deeds of a poor 
country to the Americans this is not something that the corporate media in this 
country are willing to do.

Source: Rebelión 

Translated from the Portuguese version by:

Lisa KARPOVA

Kirim email ke