November 21, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" -
Bolivia is currently
in turmoil after President Evo Morales was deposed
in a
U.S.-supported coup
d’état on November 10.
The new coup government forced Morales into exile,
began arresting politicians and journalists while
pre-exonerating
security services
of all crimes committed during the “re-establishment
of order,” effectively giving them a license to kill
all resistance to their rule. Dozens have died and
massacres of indigenous protesters have occurred in
the city of Cochabamba and the small town of Senkata.
In confusing and
alarming situations such as these, millions of
people around the world look to international human
rights organizations for leadership and guidance.
However, far from standing up for the oppressed,
Human Rights Watch has effectively endorsed the
events. In its
official communiqué,
it refrained from using the word coup, insisting
Morales “resigned”, its Americas Director José
Miguel Vivanco claiming the President stepped down
“after weeks of civil unrest and violent clashes”
and does not even mention
opposition violence
against his party
or the role of the military in demanding, at
gunpoint, that he resign. Therefore, Morales
mysteriously “traveled to Mexico,” in the
organization’s words, rather than fleeing there to
escape arrest. Instead, it tacitly endorses the new
government, advising it to “prioritize rights.”
Human Rights
Watch Director Kenneth Roth went further, presenting
the elected head of state fleeing the country at
gunpoint as a refreshing step forward for democracy,
claiming that
Morales was “the casualty of a counter-revolution
aimed at defending democracy…against electoral fraud
and his own illegal candidacy,” noting that Morales
had ordered the army to shoot protesters.
Roth also
described the coup approvingly as an “uprising”
and a “transitional
moment”
for Bolivia, while presenting President Morales as
an out-of-touch “strongman.”
New self-declared
President Jeanine Añez, whose party received 4% of
the vote share in the October elections, has already
expelled hundreds of Cuban doctors, broken off ties
to Venezuela and pulled Bolivia out of multiple
international and intercontinental organizations and
treaties.
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She
describes
the indigenous majority of Bolivians as “satanic”
and insists they should not be allowed to live in
cities, instead, being sent to the desert or the
sparsely populated highlands. Añez
declared
that she is “committed to taking all measures
necessary to pacify” the population.
Human Rights Watch
described
the law giving Bolivian security forces complete
impunity to kill dissenters as a “problematic
decree,” as if Añez had used racially insensitive
language, rather than was ordering a massacre. In
its statement,
it noted that “nine people died and 122 were
wounded” during the Cochabamba demonstration,
leaving its readers completely in the dark about who
died and who was responsible for the killing.
A long history of
double standards
Human Rights Watch
was originally established in 1978 as Helsinki
Watch, an American organization dedicated to
exposing the crimes of Eastern Bloc countries and
monitoring their compliance with the Helsinki
Accords. Since its establishment, it has
consistently been criticized for being an agent of
U.S. foreign policy, employing former U.S.
government officials in key positions, and for
displaying bias
against leftist governments unfriendly to the United
States.
For example, a
2008 report on human rights violations in Venezuela
authored by Jose Vivanco was
immediately panned
by hundreds of academics and Latin American
scholars, claiming the “grossly flawed” document
“did not meet even the most minimal standards of
scholarship, impartiality, accuracy, or
credibility.” Indeed, Vivanco openly stated his
biases, revealing that he wrote the report “because
we wanted to demonstrate to the world that Venezuela
is not a model for anyone.”
In contrast, Human
Rights Watch was
relatively silent
on the Honduran coup d’état that deposed leftist
President Manuel Zelaya, and the repression that
came after, effectively carrying water for
U.S.-backed regime change. As Bernie Sanders’
Communications Director Keane Bhatt
wrote:
Human Rights
Watch’s deep ties to U.S. corporate and state
sectors should disqualify the institution from
any public pretense of independence.”
Likewise, Amnesty
International’s image as a defender of human rights
hides a dark past of being effectively a front
organization for Western governments. As
MintPress News
revealed earlier this
year, one
co-founder of the organization, Peter Benenson was
an avowed anti-communist with deep ties to the
British Foreign and Colonial Offices, propping up
the Apartheid regime of South Africa at the British
government’s request. Another co-founder, Luis
Kutner, was an FBI asset who was involved in the
government’s assassination of Black Panther leader
Fred Hampton. Kutner
went on to form
an organization called “Friends of the FBI”,
dedicated to countering and combating criticism of
the Bureau.
Therefore, while
some may be surprised by its response to the Bolivia
crisis, Human Rights Watch’s applause of the
U.S.-backed right-wing coup against a democratically
elected leftist head of state may not be an
aberration or a mistake, but it performing its
actual purpose in reinforcing U.S. hegemony by
condemning any leftist challengers in America’s
“backyard.”
Alan MacLeod
is a MintPress Staff Writer as well as an academic
and writer for Fairness
and Accuracy in Reporting. His book, Bad
News From Venezuela: Twenty Years of Fake News and
Misreporting was published in April.
This article was originally published by "Mint
Press" -
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