Archive for March 24th, 2008

CNN should learn a lesson

March 24, 2008

Link

Quote:

“Chinese media handlers are now organizing a special three-day trip to Tibet. CNN, we are told, is not invited.”

After the mischiefs that were revealed in multiple CNN news reports, CNN learned the lesson in a hard way: they have to see other media reporters gaining access to Tibet but they themselves are going to be left alone behind. Hope CNN would not make up another story depicting how the Chinese manipulate the scene upon the visit of other foreign media in Tibet, although I really doubt that they wouldn’t.

Arrogant CNN bows

March 24, 2008

CNN News Link

After days of protests by Chinese media and online grassroots, both within China and overseas, CNN finally conceded and posted the full version of the well-known picture that depicts Tibetan riots throwing rocks at a military truck, which was previously cropped and only the left half was displayed in an older news post for the reason of “fitting better in the frame of the news page”. Such a move was considered as a stance to regain the trust of the audience, especially the Chinese, who had been considering the Western media, including CNN, to hold a neutral position that is better than China’s state-controlled media. However, this action further raised a question: why didn’t CNN choose to do so at the beginning to avoid such confusion and potentially misleading information in the edited picture but argued for the justification instead?
Still, it’s good to see that CNN made such move in responding to criticism. I am sure China and the Chinese can hear different opinions, as long as they are not based on biased and distorted facts.

Worker’s World Report

March 24, 2008

http://www.workers.org/2007/world/tibet_0327/

Tibet and the March 10 commemoration of the CIA’s 1959 ‘uprising’

By Gary Wilson

Published Mar 19, 2008 10:03 PM
Has Tibet become the front line of a new national liberation struggle? Or is something else happening there? The U.S. news media are filled with stories about events unfolding in Tibet. Each news report, however, seems to include a note that much of what they are reporting cannot be confirmed. The sources of the reports are shadowy and unknown. If past practice is any indicator, it is likely that the U.S. State Department and the CIA are their primary sources. One frequently quoted source is John Ackerly. Who is Ackerly? As president
of the International Campaign for Tibet, he and his group appear to work closely with the U.S. government, both the State Department and Congress, as part of its operations concerning Tibet. During the Cold War, Ackerly’sWashington-based job was to work with “dissidents” in Eastern Europe, particularly Romania in 1978-80.

A private international security agency in Washington, Harbor Lane Associates, lists Ackerly and the International Campaign for Tibet as its clients, along with former CIA Director and U.S. President George H.W. Bush and former Pentagon chief William Cohen.

AP, Reuters and the other Western news agencies all quote Ackerly as a major source for exaggerated reports about the clashes that have just occurred in Tibet. For example, MSNBC on March 15 reported: “John Ackerly, of the International Campaign for Tibet, a group that
supports demands for Tibetan autonomy, said in an e-mailed statement he feared ‘hundreds of Tibetans have been arrested and are being interrogated and tortured.’”

Qiangba Puncog
Qiangba Puncog, a Tibetan who is chair of the Tibet Autonomous Regional Government, described the situation quite differently at a March 17 press briefing in Beijing.

According to china.org.cn, China’s state Web site, the Tibetan leader said that allies of the exiled Dalai Lama on March 14 “engaged in reckless beating, looting, smashing and burning and their activities soon spread to other parts of the city. These people focused on street-side shops, primary and middle schools, hospitals, banks, power and communications facilities and media organizations. They set fire to passing vehicles, they chased after and beat passengers on the street, and they launched assaults on shops, telecommunication service outlets and government buildings. Their behavior has caused severe damage to the life and property of local people, and seriously undermined law and order in Lhasa.

“‘Thirteen innocent civilians were burned or stabbed to death in the riot in Lhasa on March 14, and 61 police were injured, six of them seriously wounded,’ said Qiangba Puncog.

“Statistics also show that rioters set fire to more than 300 locations, including residential houses and 214 shops, and smashed and burned 56 vehicles. …

“Qiangba Puncog also claimed that security personnel did not carry or use any lethal weapons in dealing with the riot last Friday. …

“The violence was the result of a conspiracy between domestic and overseas groups that advocate ‘Tibet independence,’ according to Qiangba Puncog. ‘The Dalai clique masterminded, planned and carefully organized the riot.’

“According to Qiangba Puncog, on March 10, 49 years ago, the slave owners of old Tibet launched an armed rebellion aimed at splitting the country. That rebellion was quickly quelled. Every year since 1959, some separatists inside and outside China have held activities around the day of the rebellion. …

“Any secessionist attempt to sabotage Tibet’s stability will not gain people’s support and is doomed to fail, he said.”

Meeting in New Delhi

Whatever is taking place in Tibet has long been in preparation. A conference was held in New Delhi, India, last June by “Friends of Tibet.” It was described as a conference for the breakaway of Tibet. The news site phayul.com reported at the time that the conference was told
“how the Olympics could provide the one chance for Tibetans to come out and protest.” A call was issued for worldwide protests, a march of exiles from India to Tibet, and protests within Tibet—all tied to the upcoming Beijing Olympics.

This was followed by a call this past January for an “uprising” in Tibet, issued by organizations based in India. The news report from Jan. 25 said that the “Tibetan People’s Uprising Movement” was established Jan. 4 to focus on the 2008 Beijing Olympics. The beginning date for the “uprising” was to be March 10.

At the time the call was issued, U.S. Ambassador to India David Mulford was meeting with the Dalai Lama in Dharamsala, India. U.S. Undersecretary of State Paula Dobriansky made a similar visit to Dharamsala last November. Dobriansky is also a member of the neocon Project for a New American Century. She has been involved in the so-called color revolutions in Eastern Europe.

Phayul.com reports that the Tibet “Uprising” group’s statement says they are acting “in the spirit of the 1959 Uprising.”

The 1959 uprising

Knowing more about the 1959 “uprising” might help in understanding today’ s events in Tibet.

In 2002 a book titled “The CIA’s Secret War in Tibet” was published by the University Press of Kansas. The two authors—Kenneth Conboy of theHeritage Foundation and James Morrison, an Army veteran trainer for the CIA—proudly detail how the CIA set up and ran Tibet’s so-called resistance movement. The Dalai Lama himself was on the CIA payroll and approved the CIA ’s plans for the armed uprising.

The CIA put the Dalai Lama’s brother, Gyalo Thodup, in charge of the bloody 1959 armed attack. A contra army was trained by the CIA in Colorado and then dropped by U.S. Air Force planes into Tibet.

The 1959 attack was a CIA planned and organized coup attempt, much like the later Bay of Pigs invasion of socialist Cuba. The purpose was to overthrow the existing Tibetan government and weaken the Chinese Revolution while tying the people of Tibet to U.S. imperialist interests. What does that sayabout today’s March uprising, that’s done in the same spirit?