Iran Election Guide

Donate to EAWV





Or, click to learn more

Search

Entries in Sky News (2)

Saturday
Mar212009

You Go First. No, You Go First: More on "Iran Response to Obama New Year Message"

Related Post: Iran Responds to Obama New Year Message

khamenei2American and British media are focusing this morning on the televised response of Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei (pictured), to President Obama's Nowruz (Iranian New Year) message.

The portrayal is stark, not only in "Western" media but in Iran's Press TV, which writes, "The Leader of the Islamic Revolution says the US has shown no sign of a real change in its hostile attitude toward the Iranian nation....The US has mistreated the Islamic Republic, which will not be forgotten by the Iranian nation....The US has repeatedly 'insulted' the Iranian nation and has threatened the country with military strikes under various pretexts, which cannot 'intimidate' the Iranian nation....The US has been a 'challenging test' for Iran since the victory of the Islamic Revolution in 1979 by practicing a 30-year animosity toward the country."

To repeat, before the drama of "hard-line Iranians" overwhelms us, none of this is unexpected. The Supreme Leader's none-too-subtle message, following official Government reaction, is that there will be no Iranian concessions in advance of talks with the US. It is also a clear statement that Iran will not give up its interest in cases like Palestine, the Lebanon, and Iraq; indeed, Tehran --- just like Washington --- will try to take the higher political and "moral" ground in all of these areas of possible conflict but also possible compromise.

It is significant that Khameini reacted so quickly, especially as Iran is in the midst of the holiday period, to the Obama message. That is a clear signal, however, that Tehran views this as a very serious US initiative. To wait several days before responding risked ceding the initiative to Washington.

Attention should be paid now to less vocal but equally important manoeuvres by Iranian leaders and diplomats. In particular, there is an immediate test of "engagement" next week with the proposed US talks on Afghanistan. Iran has been invited. If Tehran accepts, that will be a practical sign just as important as the Supreme Leader's rhetoric.
Tuesday
Mar102009

The BBC and the UN Report on Torture: Shhhh, Don't Tell Anyone

Related Post: United Nations: US Tortured, Britain Followed
Related Post: Text - UN Report on Counter-Terrorism, Human Rights, and Torture

bbc-logoAn hour ago I wrote about the United Nations report which has condemned the United States for creating a system of rendition, detention, and interrogation which violates basic human rights and allows torture and which has criticised countries such as Britain for their complicity in that system. I concluded that the report might be considered worthy of attention because it "comes from the UN, the international body to which the US and UK belong".

I apologise for my error: British newspapers are picking up on the initial report in The Guardian, but for the BBC, the story does not exist.

I have listened all morning to the Beeb's flagship radio news programme, Today. Not a word: the only reference to "torture" came from the daily religious meditation, "Thought for the Day", in which a Reverend Tom Butler reassured us that the Church no longers torture although there could be a "gray area" over issues like indefinite detention without charge.

The BBC News website is torture-free. So is Sky News, which prefers "Rock Chucking Chimp 'Proves Apes Plan Ahead'". Which, funnily enough, was a story I heard on the Today programme 20 minutes ago.

When a person is tortured by the State, that is not news. But if a person is tortured by a rock-chucking chimpanzee employed by the State....