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BETWEEN THE LINES
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Global social justice movement resources
Collection of interviews and Web sites with contacts for breaking news about the global social justice movement. (Audio files in MP3 and RealAudio formats.)

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Hungry for more news from "Between The Lines?"

Many BTL interviews are excerpted from Scott Harris' WPKN program, "Counterpoint." To hear more in-depth analysis you'll rarely hear in corporate media, listen to "Counterpoint" LIVE Monday nights from 8 to 10 p.m. ET.

Listen during the above time slot by clicking here!

Check out our interviews and other audio collectibles on our distribution production company's site at www.squeakywheel.net


medichannel.org WPKN Radio mentioned in Danny Schechter's "The News Dissector" column on independent media values. Click here to view the column on Mediachannel.org.

New Haven Advocate's
"Best of New Haven 2001"
-- Staff Picks --
Scott Harris, Best Radio News Reporter
WPKN Radio, 89.5 FM href=" http://lists.indymedia.org/mailman/public/imc-nyc-wbix/2003-February/000125.html ">"Giving Voice to Dissent: Bridgeport's WPKN Radio Covers The News With Left-Of-Center Takes Not Found In The Mainstream Media" Hartford Courant, Feb. 26, 2003

"The Rest of the News," New Haven Advocate, July 3, 2003


ISSUES IN-DEPTH

War And Profiteering

"Iraq On The Record," U.S. Rep. Henry Waxman report, Mar. 16, 2004

"Greenspan Testimony Highlights Bush Plan for Deliberate Federal Bankruptcy," by Michael Meurer, truthout.org, March 2, 2004 "Noam Chomsky on Middle East Conflict and U.S. War Plan Against Iraq," Between The Lines interview with Noam Chomsky, conducted by Scott Harris, for the Week Ending May 3, 2002

"The Iraq War & The Bush Administration's Pursuit of Global Domination," Counterpoint, Sept. 15, 2003

The Iraq Crisis, a Global Policy Forum, UN Security Council section on the 13 years of sanctions and other background of the war, the humanitarian situation, the importance of Iraq's huge oil resources, and disputes over a post-war government and reconstruction plan

"Occupation, Inc." Southern Exposure, Winter, 2003/2004

"Pipeline Politics: Oil, The Taliban, and the Political Balance of Central Asia," World Press Review Special Report, Nov.-Dec. 2001

"War Profiteering," by The Nation editors, April 24, 2003

"An Annotated Saddam Chronology," ZNet, Dec. 15, 2003

Civil Liberties

"Keeping Secrets: The Bush administration is doing the public's business out of the public eye. Here's how--and why," by Christopher H. Schmitt and Edward T. Pound, U.S. News & World Report, Dec. 12, 2003

"FBI Memo: Tactics Used During Protests And Demonstrations" Federal Bureau of Investigation, Oct. 15, 2003

"F.B.I. Scrutinizes Antiwar Rallies" by Eric Lichtblau, New York Times, Nov. 23, 2003

"Fascism Anyone?" 14 Signs of Fascism, Free Inquiry Magazine, Volume 23, No. 2

"Germany In 1933: The Easy Slide Into Fascism," The Crisis Papers, June 9, 2003

Multi-Ethnic Issues Advocacy

Dr. Earl Ofari Hutchinson's Commentaries, The Hutchinson Report
and in Audio (needs RealPlayer)

Between
The Lines

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Between The Lines
For The Week Ending March 26, 2004

ANNOUNCEMENTS

  • In case you missed the Media Reform Conference in Madison, Wis. in November, RealAudio and MP3 of speeches and workshops can be heard by clicking here!

THIS WEEK'S PROGRAM

  • After Terrorist Bombing,
    Spanish Election Defeat
    of Bush Ally Sends Shock
    Waves Through Washington

    For story text and audio, Click here!

  • Human Rights Group Charges U.S.
    is Abusing Prisoners in Afghanistan

    For story text and audio, Click here!

  • Campaign to Close Down
    U.S. Army Training School
    Gears up for Legislative Battle

    For story text and audio, Click here!

  • Underreported News Summary
    from Around the World

    For full summary and audio, Click here!
LISTEN to this week's half-hour program of Between The Lines by clicking on one of the links below. MP3 files available until March 30, 2004.
This week we present Between The Lines' summary of under-reported news stories and:

After Terrorist Bombing,
Spanish Election Defeat
of Bush Ally Sends Shock
Waves Through Washington

Interview with Jeff Cohen,
columnist and media critic,
conducted by Scott Harris

The world reacted in horror at the carnage inflicted in Madrid after terrorists bombed four commuter railroad trains, killing 200 people and injuring 1,500 just three days before Spain's national elections. The government of the ruling conservative Popular Party conducted an investigation into who was responsible for the bombings, and initially implicated the Basque separatist group ETA. But it quickly became clear that contrary to official statements, the evidence gathered by the government pointed toward al-Qaeda , not ETA.

The Spanish election turned on the widely held perception that the government had attempted to manipulate public opinion by falsely disconnecting the bombing from Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar's policy of backing the Bush administration's war on Iraq -- a war that 90 percent of Spain's people opposed.

The shock waves of the Socialist party victory in Spain were felt around the world and especially in Washington, where the Bush administration lost a valuable ally in their war and occupation of Iraq. The Socialists, led by Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, had pledged long before the election to withdraw Spain's 1,300 troops from Iraq if the U.N. doesn't replace Washington as the interim power in Baghdad by June 30. Between The Lines' Scott Harris spoke with columnist and media critic Jeff Cohen, who looks at the results of the Spanish election, the media and the lessons it may hold for other governments who lie to their people to justify war.

Jeff Cohen is the founder of the media watch group Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting. Read Jeff Cohen's article, "Liars Lose: The Lessons of Regime Change in Spain," by clicking here.

Related links

  • Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR) at www.fair.org
  • "Bush Loses an Election," editorial by the Madison Capital Times (Wisconsin), March 16, 2004
  • "Madrid's Effects: The War on Terror is at Risk," editorial by the Minneapolis Star Tribune (Minnesota), March 16, 2004
  • "Dear W, Your Father Knew Best," by Robert Scheer, the Los Angeles Times, March 16, 2004
  • "Australian PM Admits He Could Face Same Voter Backlash as Spanish Leader," Agence France Presse, March 16, 2004
  • "Madrid: UN's Credibility Critically Wounded," by Ritt Goldstein, The Asia Times, March 16, 2004
  • "New Spanish P.M. Promises Iraq Withdrawal," The Guardian/UK, March 15, 2004

    Human Rights Group Charges U.S.
    is Abusing Prisoners in Afghanistan

    Interview with John Sifton,
    researcher with the Asia Division
    of Human Rights Watch,
    conducted Scott Harris

    Upon their release from detention on the U.S. Naval Base at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba, several British citizens captured in Afghanistan by American forces have alleged that they were subjected to abuse and psychological torture. According to accounts published in the British press, prisoners at Guantanamo's Camp X-Ray and Camp Delta -- held without due process -- were regularly beaten, lived in cages exposed to the elements and were fed a diet of foul water and food.

    While many of these allegations have been covered in the U.S. media, receiving less attention are the conditions under which an undetermined number of prisoners are now being held by American forces in Afghanistan. An investigation conducted by Human Rights Watch concluded that the U.S. administered system of arrest and detention in Afghanistan exists outside of the rule of law. In a recently published report, Human Rights Watch charges that compelling evidence suggests that U.S. personnel have committed acts against detainees amounting to torture or cruel, inhumane or degrading treatment. Three detainees are known to have died while in American custody, two of which were classified as homicides by U.S. pathologists.

    In addition, Human Rights Watch says that the U.S. military has arbitrarily detained civilians and used excessive force during arrests of non-combatants. Between The Lines' Scott Harris spoke with John Sifton, a researcher with the Asia Division of Human Rights Watch, who summarizes his group's investigation into the situation in Afghanistan.

    To get more information on the Human Rights Watch report titled, "Enduring Freedom: Abuses by U.S. Forces in Afghanistan," call the group at (212) 290-4700 or visit their website at www.hrw.org

    Related links:

    Campaign to Close Down
    U.S. Army Training School
    Gears up for Legislative Battle

    Interview with Jacqueline Baker,
    legislative coordinator
    of School of the Americas Watch,
    conducted by Melinda Tuhus

    In 1990, Maryknoll priest Roy Bourgeois founded the School of the Americas Watch to coordinate a campaign to close the Pentagon's training school for Latin American military officers then called School of the Americas, based at Fort Benning in Columbus, Ga. Many of those who receive training at the school have returned to their own nations to carry out torture, rape and murder. Opponents of the SOA maintain that the school trains terrorists on U.S. soil.

    Over the years, annual fall protests at the school, which is now called the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation, or WHISC, have drawn more than 10,000 people. Hundreds of activists have served prison terms for committing civil disobedience for what they call "crossing the line" at Fort Benning. In recent years, legislation has been introduced in Congress to cut off taxpayer funding for WHISC, but thus far without success.

    In late March, SOA Watch is conducting its spring Mobilization and Lobby Day, bringing hundreds of people to Washington, D.C., to lobby their members of Congress in support of a bill that would close the military school. Between The Lines' Melinda Tuhus spoke with Jacqueline Baker, legislative coordinator of SOA Watch, about the campaign to close the School of the Americas and the prospects for passage of a bill to shut it down this year.

    To get more information on the group's March mobilization, call them at (202) 234-3440 or visit their website at www.soaw.org

    This week's summary
    of under-reported news

    Compiled by Bob Nixon

    • In the ongoing civil war in the Congo, where over 4 million people have died, rape of women and girls is commonplace. ("Silence=Rape," The Nation, March 8, 2004)
    • Critics warn that ignoring domestic terror groups that support actions such as the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing could prove to be a fatal mistake. ("Homegrown Terrorist," In These Times, March 15, 2004)
    • Free college tuition is a radical idea whose time may have come. ("Majoring in Debt," The Progressive, January 2004)

    DOWNLOAD this week's half-hour program of Between The Lines by clicking on one of the links below. Needs Quicktime Player or your favorite MP3 player. Note: Make sure your browser is set for streaming or download depending on your connection speed. MP3 files available until March 30, 2004

    Note to our broadcast affiliates: We are now offering FTP access for faster, more reliable download of our broadcast quality files. Please call Anna Manzo at (203) 268-8446 ext. 2, to register for FTP logon access or send feedback to us at betweenthelines@snet.net.

    Credits:
    Senior news editor: Bob Nixon
    Program narration: Denise Manzari
    News reader: Elaine Osowski
    Segment producer: Melinda Tuhus
    Distribution: Anna Manzo, Harry Minot, Jeff Yates
    Senior Web editor/producer: Anna Manzo
    Web producer: Jeff Yates
    Newswire Editor: Hank Hoffman
    Web editor: Bill Cosentino
    Executive producer: Scott Harris
    Theme music: Mikata

... MORE ...

Last Week's Program

Between The Lines Week Ending 3/19/04

Election 2004

"Did Bush Press For Iraq-9/11 Link?," 60 Minutes, CBS News, March 21, 2004

"Clinton: Bush Had Urgent Warnings on Al-Qaeda," The New York Times, March 20, 2004

"Ex-Advisor Says Bush Eyed Bombing of Iraq on 9/11," Reuters, March 19, 2004

"Onward Deaniacs," By Roger Hickey, TomPaine.com, March 18, 2004

"Bush Support Among Military Voters Is Eroding," Knight Ridder, March 14, 2004

American Empire/War Profiteering

"After 9/11. U.S. Policy Built On World Bases" San Francisco Chronicle, March 21, 2004

"General Sacked By Bush For Opposing Imposed Privatization," Guardian/UK, March 18, 2004

"Terror And Taboo In The Homeland," By Ira Chernus, Common dreams, March 16, 2004

"Chalmers Johnson: The Disquieted American," San Diego City Beat, March 15, 2004

"The New Pentagon Papers" Salon.com, March 10, 2004

"Postwar" Occupation of Iraq

"One Year Later Than What?" by Tom Engelhardt, TomDispatch.com, March 21, 2004

"Worldwide Protests Demand Iraq Pullout," Reuters, March 21, 2004

"New Iraq? Hooded Protest And Masked Statistics," By Robert Fisk, Independent/UK, March 20, 2004

"Welcome To The Quagmire," By Juan Cole, Salon.com, March 19, 2004

"Iraq On The Record," U.S. Rep. Henry Waxman report, March 16, 2004

"Spanish Blowback," By Jim Lobe, Antiwar.com, March 16, 2004

"Relatives Of Soldiers Killed In Iraq Protest At U.S. Base," Agence France Presse, March 15, 2004

Civil Liberties

"The Folly Of The New Guantanamo Trials," Slate, March 21, 2004

"Spain, EU And U.S.: War On Terror Or War On Liberties," By Marjorie Cohn, The Jurist, March 17, 2004

"Spy Tactics Endanger Political Dissent," by Murray Polner, Newsday/Long Island, New York, March 16, 2004

"Army Says Intelligence Officers Overstepped In Texas Inquiry," Chronicle Of Higher Education, March 15, 2004

"Bush Administration Eroding 'Threshold Rights,'" Boston Phoenix, March 5, 2004

Media And Activism

"Fake Reporter Karen Ryan: 'I Feel Like Political Roadkill,'" Campaigndesk.org, March 18, 2004


Between The Lines
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