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- From: biow@cs.umd.edu (Christopher Biow)
- Newsgroups: alt.current-events.somalia
- Subject: Re: WHAT?!?!?!
- Message-ID: <63070@mimsy.umd.edu>
- Date: 27 Dec 92 18:31:12 GMT
- References: <1992Dec22.182540.5282@sunova.ssc> <1766500006@igc.apc.org>
- Sender: news@mimsy.umd.edu
- Organization: U of Maryland, Dept. of Computer Science, Coll. Pk., MD 20742
- Lines: 27
-
- >[post implying that lack of news media coverage of Somalia famine
- > (until recently) implies something about its political orientation]
-
- Most extraordinary cases of human suffering received little to no
- press attention. Famine and genocide have occurred and been under-
- reported in (feel free to add to the list):
-
- Cambodia, Nigeria, Burundi, E. Timor, Uganda, Ethiopia, China,
- Vietnam, Somalia, Sudan, Chad.
-
- The governments (or lack thereof) have been of all alignments,
- from overtly fascist, to darlings of the Left. In general, such
- suffering is simply not news--it sells no commercials.
-
- Only when the suffering is inter-racial (races that the consumers
- can identify, that is) does it command press attention. When the
- Tutsui killed 100,000 Hutu in Burundi, press coverage was nil. Few
- if any Americans can tell a Hutu from a Tutsui. When S. African
- police shoot a black demonstrator, THEN it is news. In WWII, when
- the Japanese sacked, raped, and looted Chinese cities, western
- press coverage was nil. When they sacked Nanking, and raped
- two British (white) nurses, the international outcry was enormous.
-
- As with any consipiracy theoretical approach, such press silence
- can be used to justify your favorite theory, on any side of the
- political spectrum.
-
-