Halloween scares have come early to
South America, and one knocking on the front door right now is
Telesur, a new satellite TV network funded largely by Venezuela's
authoritarian president Hugo Chávez. According to its
director, Aram Aharonian, the purpose is to disseminate "a truthful
view of the social and cultural diversity of Latin America and the
Caribbean to the world."
But rattling Venezuela's democratic neighbors and legitimizing the
region's leftist terror movements seems to be its real mission.
Promotional broadcasts in early July featured flattering video of
Colombian guerrilla commander Manuel "Sureshot" Marulanda, who is
trying to overthrow his country's government. Moreover, news
bulletins and documentaries have demonstrated a marked radical left
bias since the channel's official startup on July 24.
While the Bush Administration and the hemisphere's other democrats
should take care not to overreact to Chávez's provocation,
his international broadcasting effort should prompt genuine concern
and measures to strengthen protections for independent,
non-government media to provide a balance of diverse perspectives
in a free, competitive marketplace of ideas.
Nueva Televisión del Sur ("New Television of the South") is
the joint creation of the governments of Cuba and Venezuela.
Information Minister Andrés Izarra was named president and
chief editor and had to resign his ministerial post to blunt
criticism that the channel was a Chávez mouthpiece. Still,
Telesur offices are co-located with Venezuelan state TV, and 51
percent of the new network's money comes from Venezuela's
government, with Argentina, Cuba, and Uruguay contributing 20, 19,
and 10 percent respectively.
The same consortium is backing a production company to help provide
content. Known as the Latin American Content Factory or FLACO
(which ironically means "thin" in Spanish), it promises to tap
"unknown cultural reserves" in Latin America to co-produce and
finance programs not only for Telesur, but other Latin American
stations that will accept them.
For now, programming on Telesur is limited to 4 hours a day but
will ramp up to 8 hours in late September. So far, newscasts have
featured statements by Venezuelan officials and stories critical of
the United States and Colombia. Feigning balance, one news piece
showed peasant demonstrators agitating for land reform-a policy
that Chávez already favors through expropriation. Another
show elegized fallen guerrilla hero and Castro chum Ernesto "Che"
Guevara.
Telesur is not alone in government-sponsored international
broadcasting. The United Kingdom has a foreign division in its
British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), Germany has Deutsche Welle
(DW), and Qatar has its Al-Jazeera satellite channel. All have
become staples on cable systems around the world.
The BBC and German DW are mature networks with balanced newscasts
that often run stories critical of their governments. Although
Al-Jazeera features interviews with radical mullahs and statements
from terrorists, it hosts vigorous debate programs that have
brought outside views and critical thinking to many closed Middle
Eastern societies. The United States funds its own Voice of America
and surrogate outlets like Radio Free Europe to provide alternative
news to captive populations and editorials to explain U.S. policies
to foreigners.
But director Aharonian told reporters that Telesur is more than an
alternative news source, aiming to "recover, or bring back, the
Word that has been held hostage for over three decades by
dictators, corrupt politicians and holders of large amounts of
capital . . . that worked together to ransack our nations, and
tried to convince us that through intrigue and globalization,
everything would improve."
According to him and others at the network, Latin Americans see
themselves through images controlled by "the North." But that
contradicts the fact that there are more than 1200 independent
newspapers, 500 television outlets, 7,500 radio stations, and
nearly 70 cable systems in Latin America, according to recent
surveys. Like other Chávez supporters, Aharonian employs a
doublespeak that identifies Latin American private enterprise and
media with the United States, as if their activities were somehow
illegitimate or traitorous.
True, Latin American television is full of steamy
telenovelas (soap operas) and sappy comedies and features
too few cultural or public affairs shows. Moreover, skyrocketing
production costs have made homegrown programming too expensive to
be viable, and so many small outlets have had to share content at
the cost of local flavor and diverse points of view. News and
investigative reporting is ubiquitous-but only to the point that
journalists avoid stories about corrupt political leaders.
Nowhere is this more troublesome than in three of the network's
sponsor countries. In Cuba, private media are banned and
independent Cuban journalists have been jailed as political
prisoners. In Venezuela, draconian laws punish journalists with
jail terms and media owners with closure for criticizing state
officials. In Argentina, the police intimidate reporters who
investigate corruption, according to Freedom House's Freedom of the
Press 2005 report.
For their part, the United States and other moderate democracies
should take care not to overreact to this new propaganda organ in
ways that make it gain more of an audience than it really deserves.
For now, the satellite channel only reaches households rich enough
to afford cable service, and there is abundant private media to
offset its bias. What the region needs is not another government
voice to counter it, but stronger protections for press freedoms
plus balance through more diverse content.
Toward that end, the United States and allies should work
together-perhaps through the Organization of American States and
Inter-American Press Association-to strengthen press freedoms,
remove barriers to private media ownership, provide grants for
independent production, and encourage philanthropy to support
better educational and cultural broadcasting within the
region.
Last month, Representative Connie Mack (R-FL) introduced a measure
to fund "pro-democracy" broadcasts to Venezuela to counter Telesur.
The bill was well intended, but if Washington wants to send useful
signals, it should do so by revitalizing its neglected Voice of
America service to the region-which has been cut back since the
mid-1990s-with programming that supports U.S. goals of
strengthening democratic governance, building trade capacity, and
encouraging the rule of law. No need to reinvent the wheel-just use
the tools already at hand.
As for Telesur, it should sink or swim on its own merits. If it
broadcasts a marathon weekend of Fidel Castro's 7-hour speeches,
you can bet viewers will reach for the remote. If it calls for the
overthrow of neighboring democracies, those governments would be
justified in blocking its signal.
Stephen Johnson is Senior Policy Analyst for Latin America in the Douglas and Sarah Allison Center for Foreign Policy of the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for International Studies at The Heritage Foundation.