The Most Revolutionary Act

Diverse Ramblings of an American Refugee

Dr Stuart Jeanne Bramhall

Dr Stuart Jeanne Bramhall
Location
New Plymouth, New Zealand
Birthday
December 02
Bio
64 year old psychiatrist, activist and author of free ebook 21st CENTURY REVOLUTION - a free download at http://www.smashwords.com/books/view/120942. My 2010 memoir THE MOST REVOLUTIONARY ACT: MEMOIR OF AN AMERICAN REFUGEE describes the circumstances that led me to leave the US in 2002. More information about both books (and me) at www.stuartbramhall.com

SEPTEMBER 19, 2012 6:48PM

CNN and the Bahraini Royal Family - Part II

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(This second post relates to US media censorship of Obama’s hypocritical policy towards Bahrain’s pro-democracy movement.)

Amber Lyon

Amber Lyon

For the most part, the US media has been totally silent on the Bahraini pro-democracy movement and Obama’s decision to back the repressive regime that seeks to crush them. On September 4th, Glenn Greenwald published an opinion piece in the Guardian blasting CNN International (CNNi), the most watched English language network in the Middle East, for refusing to air the hour long documentary their own crew –led by investigative correspondent Amber Lyon – filmed in Bahrain in the aftermath of the government crackdown. As Greenwald reports, the commentary features graphic video footage of regime forces arresting and shooting peaceful, unarmed demonstrators, as well as explicit descriptions by pro-democracy activists of the torture they received at the hands of police and security officials.

The video footage was obtained at great cost, both to the CNN crew and the activists who consented to talk to them. While they were filming, Lyon and her cameramen were violently detained by 20 heavily-armed men in black ski masks who forced them to the ground with machine guns, seized their cameras. They were then forcibly transported to detention facility and interrogated for the next six hours.

CNN International Suppresses “iRevolution”

On 19 June 2011 at 8pm, CNN’s domestic outlet in the US aired “iRevolution” for the first and only time. According to Lyons, the documentary was deliberately aimed at an international audience. Yet despite receiving several prestigious journalism awards, and despite the dangers their own journalists and their sources endured to produce it, CNN International (CNNi) still refuses to broadcast the documentary.

In March 2012, Lyon was laid off from CNN as part of an unrelated move by the network to outsource its investigative documentaries. Last month the investigative journalist, who has more than 20,000 followers, began tweeting about CNN’s blatant censorship. “CNNi’s refusal to broadcast ‘iRevolution’, she tweeted on August 16th, “baffled producers”. Linking to the YouTube clip of the Bahrain segment, she added “the censorship was devastating to my crew and activists who risked lives to tell [the] story.

The following day, a representative of CNN’s business affairs office called Lyon’s acting agent, George Arquilla of Octagon Entertainment, and threatened that her severance payments and insurance benefits would be immediately terminated if she ever again spoke publicly about this matter, or spoke negatively about CNN.

King Hamad’s $32 Million PR Campaign

Greenwald believes the call is inked to a massive, well funded PR campaign, the Bahraini Royal family has undertaken to improve its image. As reported by Bahrain Watch, the regime has spent more than $32 million in PR fees since the Arab Spring began in February, 2011. One of the regimes largest contracts was with the Washington DC firm Qorvis Communications. As Time reported last November, Qorvis also does extensive PR work for Bahrain’s close allies, the Saudi royal family. Some leaked a CNN internal email to the Guardian about a Qorvis representative calling about excessively favorable mention of neurosurgeon Dr Nabeel Rajab (see prior post).

CNN’s Business Relationship with Bahrain

While it’s common for US mainstream outlets to bend over backwards to portray White House policy (in this case backing repressive regimes in Saudi Arabia and Bahrain), Greenwald suggests that CNN also had powerful commercial reasons for suppressing Lyon’s documentary footage. Greenwald’s article about “iRevolution” is accompanied by a backgrounder outlining CNN’s business relationships with the Bahraini monarchy. At the same time as CNN was supposedly covering the Arab Spring, Bahrain was a major participant in CNN’s various “sponsorship” opportunities – i.e. paid “informercials” dedicated at improving the nation’s image around the world. As Greenwald documents in the second piece, the result was a number of propagandistic documentaries – promoting Bahrain as an attractive haven for western investors and King Hammad as an avid environmentalist. All were broadcast with no or minimal disclosure that the government of Bahrain had paid for the programming.



The 13 minute segment produced in Bahrain is available at i-Revolution

 

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Comments

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Somehow you got disconnected from my favorites list... great post and sad testimony to the state of multinational media conglomerates... I wonder if OS has been doing deals with the Shopping Network and ESPN??
Great work Dr. You and Glenn Greenwald.

r
Thanks, Toritto. I'm afraid it was 99% Glenn Greenwald and only 1% me.
I couldn't access the video here, but thank you for providing the link, & the other links backgrounding this situation.

I fear for ( we are all ) Ali. The rest, presumably, are either dead, or in the process of being identified, captured and tortured.

Bahrain's Jabba-the-Hut Foreign Minister, Sheik Al Khalifa, does truth a disservice, as do CNN's management. This is the American idea of Democracy, writ large, in letters of blood.

Thanks for posting this.
lest we forget what total bastards are running the american government. but i already knew that, what i'd like to see is some indication that ordinary americans are tired of being ruled by these creatures. sigh...

cnn gets a pass, of course: they are a commercial organization. if you are unwilling to act gainst political structures you are not entitled to complain about commercial organizations.
Thanks, Kim for the update on the activists. Al, you make an excellent point.
Thank you for the good and informative post.

I think that the problem is that big US mainstream outlets have got so much advantage simply being so big and wealthy. They can tell most often their story First and broadcast it in TV. Most people are willing to believe the story, which they see at TV news, and afterward it isn't easy to admit that they were cheated.

Big commercial news companies and CIA were fast to understand the importance of the Net, too. Using the Net, which is free to use for everybody (or is it???) it is not easy to beat big news companies portraying White House policy... Facebook, twitter, youtube (and OS) are open for CIA, (and White House) too.

On these days information wars are getting more and more important.
Good point, Hannu, about the CIA. Here's a fascinating 2007 article from the New Zealand Herald about CIA involvement in Facebook.