Wednesday, July 24, 2013

US Answer on Rwanda & M23 in DR Congo Was to Stearns of Voice of America, State Media, Censor at UN


By Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS, July 24 -- When US State Department spokesperson Jen Psaki was asked at Tuesday briefing to denounce Rwanda for supporting the M23 rebels, few reported on who asked the question.
  It was Scott Stearns of Voice of America, a government broadcaster on whose Broadcasting Board of Governor's Psaki's boss Secretary of State John Kerry sits.
  So the US asked itself a staged question, for the second day in a row, and Psaki pulled out her binder and read a prepared answer. Stearn had asked the same question, without yet being able to cite HRW, on July 22: video here, from Minute 52:16.
  Then, Psaki had promised to get back with an answer. Inner City Press asked US Mission to the UN spokespeople about the VOA question -- as well as about the Congolese Army's 391st Battalion, which after US training has engaged in mass rape and corpses desecrationsee USUN answer here.
  But it appears that Psaki held back the answer a full 24 hours, delivering it after Stearn re-posed the question by citing HRW's study (but not the correction HRW had that morning appended to it.)
  Voice of America, contrary to its recent lobbying, is state media. Inner City Press has filed and received US Freedom of Information Act responses about VOA, showing among other things that its editor Steve Redisch last year asked the UN to "review" the accreditation of Inner City Press. 
  The documents show VOA saying it had the support in this of ReutersAgence France Presse and others on the board of the United Nations Correspondents Association, headed this year by Pamela Falk of CBS.
In full disclosure, Inner City Press has further FOIA requesting pending for documents to which BBG repeatedly denies access.
  VOA and its affilates, which include Radio Marti, Al Hurra and others, have this month been celebrating a legal change allowing them to broadcast what many consider propaganda inside the US, and not only outside of it.
  Without getting here into that debate, the spectacle of state media Voice of America two days in a row asking the US State Department canned questions about the DRC, as curtain raisers to a UN Security Council to chaired Thursday by John Kerry, who is on VOA's governing board, casts a new light. As stated yesterday, this is a machine. 
Footnote: Voice of American and BBG argue for broadcasting propaganda inside the US by claiming there is a clamor for their content. If it's any measure, VOA's State Department "correspondent" Scott Stearns has 46 followers on Twitter; its UN correspondent has during all this been most occupied with the birth of the UK royal baby. 
  How will VOA "cover" the July 25 DRC meeting of the UN Security Council which "editor" John Kerry will be chairing? Will VOA, for example, ask about the US' training of the 391st Battalion (on which HRW was also silent, as on theUN's failed Human Rights Due Diligence Policy under Herve Ladsous) -- and if so, in a similarly canned fashion? Watch this site.