Full text of Human Rights Record of the U.S. in 2005 (Xinhua) Updated: 2006-03-09 11:47
On Oct. 24, 2005, a national public opinion survey released by the U.S. News
and World Report revealed that 73 percent Americans believe their leaders are
out of touch with the average person; 64 percent of Americans feel that their
leaders are corrupted by power; 62 percent think that leaders seek for increase
in personal wealth. A joint Gallup Poll by the USA Today and CNN found job
approval for Congress, which has a Republican majority, has fallen to 29
percent, the lowest level since 1994; 49 percent American adults say they
believe "most members of Congress are corrupt." Former U.S. Attorney General
Ramsey Clark said it is an offense to democracy to describe the United States as
a democracy.
The United States flaunts its press freedom but scandals about the U.S.
government blocking and manipulating information came out continually. The New
York Times reported on March 13, 2005 that the United States is in "a new age of
prepackaged TV news." The federal government has aggressively distributed
prepackaged news reports to TV stations. At least 20 federal agencies, including
the Defense Department and the Census Bureau, have made and distributed hundreds
of television news segments in the past four years.
The U.S. military pays Iraqi newspapers and journalists for the so-called
information operations campaign. The Los Angeles Times reported on Nov. 30, 2005
that the U.S. military troops havebeen writing articles burnishing the image of
the U.S. mission in Iraq, sending them to a Washington-based firm, which
translates them into Arabic and places them in Baghdad newspapers. It said the
military also has purchased an Iraqi newspaper and taken control of a radio
station "to channel pro-American messages to the Iraqi public." Other reports
said that U.S. army officers created an outfit called the Baghdad Press Club
that pays members as much as 200 U.S. dollars a month to churn out positive
pieces about American military operations. The Washington Post in an editorial
called these activities against freedom of the press as "planted propaganda."
The U.S. government's ban on different voices through
various means has been condemned by the international community. On Nov. 22,
2005, British newspaper the Daily Mirror, citing a "top secret" memo on April
16, 2004 from Downing Street, said the U.S. government wished to bomb the
headquarters of Arabic TV station Al-Jazeera in Doha, Qatar, during the Iraqi
War to block information about the real situation of the war and remove its
negative influence on the U.S. side; the revelation resulted in protests by all
the Al-Jazeera staff in more than 30 countries andcriticism from the
International Federation of Journalists. On Nov. 27, British Observer said
Al-Jazeera offices in Baghdad and Kabul had all been bombed by the U.S. military
and its journalistsdetained, threatened, abused and harassed by the U.S.
military during the Iraqi war. In fact, U.S. crude intrusion into press freedom
happened repeatedly. On April 8, 2003, cameraman Jose Couso of the Spanish
Telecino television station was shot dead by U.S. soldiers. After Couso's death,
the Spanish court issued warrants for the Spanish police and International
Criminal Police Organization to arrest and extradite three suspected U.S.
soldiers immediately. On Aug. 28, 2005, U.S. forces opened fire at a team of
Reuters reporters; one Reuters soundman was shot several times in the face and
chest, and he was killed on the spot. Two Iraqi reporters who rushed to the spot
were also arrested and forced to exposure to the scorching sun. According to the
Committee to Protect Journalists, the United States is holding four Iraqi
journalists in detention centers in Iraq and one journalist of Al-Jazeera, at
the United States Naval Base at Guantanamo bay, Cuba. None of the five have been
charged with a specific crime. InJuly 2005, the New York Times reporter Judith
Miller was sentenced to jail for refusing to disclose her source. Covering the
aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, a photographer for Canadian Toronto Star daily
was hurled to the ground by New Orleans police.The police grabbed his two
cameras and removed memory cards. When he asked for his pictures back, the
police insulted him and threatened to hit him. A reporter for a local newspaper
of New Orleans was also attacked while covering a shoot-out between police and
local residents. The police detained him and smashed all of his equipment on the
ground.
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