“Civilization exists
by geologic consent, subject to change without notice.”
-- Will Durant,
historian
Festive Depression
Curious things happen
to the British public around Christmas. The weeks and months leading up to
December 25 are characterized by a manic focus on consumption, materialism
and unrestrained hedonism. The Season of Good Will actually sees more
alcohol-fuelled violence on our streets, more family strife, and raised
levels of suicide. One in two people suffer from “festive depression” after
Christmas, the Guardian reports, with 51% of Britons suffering in some way
following holiday excesses. (“A merry Christmas - but not such a happy new
year,” Sandra Haurant, The Guardian, December 9, 2003)
For many Westerners,
then, the tsunami of December 26 struck at an extraordinary time and place.
A catastrophe that left millions with nothing occurred exactly as Westerners
were over-indulging in everything. The waves that killed 150,000 brought
hell on earth to many of the places we think of as paradise.
Empathy for the
victims was doubtless increased by the dramatic, televised nature of the
disaster, the involvement of large numbers of Western tourists – a number of
journalists were themselves holidaying in the area at the time – and by the
fact that these are indeed much-loved tourist destinations. Indonesia, in
particular, is also a major economic and military ally of the West.
Certainly no one
should imagine media corporations are suddenly guided by selfless altruism.
Jacques Steinberg reported in The New York Times:
“In mounting their
public-relations campaigns, however quietly, the networks were mindful that
whatever the drop in network television viewership in recent years, people
tend to flock back at times of crisis. And this story, like the Sept. 11
attacks or the capture of Saddam Hussein, offered that rare chance to try to
recapture their interest.” (Steinberg, “Reporting Live From Hell: TV
Scrambles for Glory,” The New York Times, January 10, 2005)
Likewise, leading
British and US politicians - in actuality war criminals still at large -
eagerly swooped on the chance to divert public attention from the ongoing,
man-made catastrophe in Iraq, and to recast themselves as humanitarians
bringing aid, fair trade and justice to the Third World.
The claim might be
taken seriously if political parties and powerful popular movements were
moving to reform a corporate system programmed to maximize profits at any
cost – costs that have for centuries included the mass exploitation and
immiseration of the poor, and even the demolition of the environmental life
support systems on which all life depends.
Nevertheless,
governments around the world have been shamed into matching and
leapfrogging the generosity of their own people. With promises of aid
touching $2bn, Japan heads the donor list with a promise of $500m. But,
again, realism is required.
After an earthquake
killed more than 40,000 people in the Iranian city of Bam in December 2003,
the international community pledged $1 billion in aid. Of this money Iran
received some $17 million. The streets of Bam are still filled with mounds
of rubble. Tens of thousands of people remain packed into prefabricated
housing. (Ginger Thompson and Nazila Fathi, “Earlier Disasters -- For
Honduras and Iran, World's Aid Evaporated,” The New York Times,
January 11, 2005)
In October 1998,
Hurricane Mitch devastated Central America, killing 9,000 people in Honduras
at a cost of more than $9 billion in damage. The international community
pledged $9 billion to rebuild Central America -- most of the money was never
sent. Three years after the hurricane, 20,000 people were still living in
temporary shelters.
Selective Compassion
The current response
to the tsunami, we are told, will be different. Jan Egeland, the UN
emergency relief coordinator, is certainly impressed:
“The compassion has
never ever been like this." (“Record aid operation, but progress slow,”
Brian Whitaker, The Guardian, January 3, 2005)
But as dissident
writer Harsha Walia noted on ZNet Asia:
“Compassion has become
morally and politically appropriate, as it should be. What is inappropriate
is the ability to decide which images are worthy of those emotions. What is
inexcusable is when those images are a direct consequence of policies waged
by our governments and corporations for which we are culpable, we seem to
exhibit compassion-deficient syndrome.” (Harsha Walia, “The tsunami and the
discourse of compassion,” ZNet Asia, December 30, 2004)
Indeed, the admirable
outpouring of media and public compassion for the victims of Asia’s natural
disaster makes the near-total indifference to the suffering of Iraqi
civilians under Western attack even more stunning. Who would believe,
looking at the images of devastation from Indonesia, Sri Lanka and Thailand,
that Britain and the United States are responsible for bringing a comparable
disaster to a single country, Iraq? While the US government has so far
pledged $350m to the victims of the tsunami, and the UK government £50m, the
US has spent $200 billion on the Iraq war and the UK £6bn.
Simon Jenkins writes
in The Times:
“To me the greatest
disaster of 2004 was not the Indonesian tsunami but the continuing conflict
in Iraq, the bloody endgame of the 9/11 disaster. The upper estimate of
deaths in Iraq, 100,000, is eerily similar to that for the tsunami.
While the one disaster
rates as an act of God and the other an act of man, to whit the President of
the United States, to the hapless Iraqis the difference must seem notional.
They must feel as impotent in the face of falling bombs and the continuing
tidal wave of destruction. The bodies of their loved ones must seem just as
dead.” (Jenkins, ‘In the absence of God, blame has become our prevailing
religion,” The Times, December 31, 2004)
But Jenkins is wrong
-- the upper estimate for deaths made in the only serious scientific study
to date is 194,000. Professor Richard Garfield -- one of the authors of a
report conducted by the John Hopkins
Bloomberg School of
Public Health on Iraqi casualties published in the Lancet science journal --
has said: “The true death toll is far more likely to be on the high-side of
our point estimate [98,000] than on the low side.” (Email sent to Media Lens
reader, October 31, 2004)
And yet our search of
the LexisNexis media database in early January showed that the words “The
Lancet” and “John Hopkins Bloomberg School” had been mentioned a total of
just 23 times in all UK newspapers since the report was published on October
29, 2004. The words “The Lancet” and “Iraq” had been mentioned 127 times. By
contrast the words “tsunami” and “Asia” were mentioned in 700 newspaper
articles in just three days in early January. The total since December 26
overwhelms the counting capacity of LexisNexis but certainly runs into many
thousands.
In responding to the
question of why the BBC has focused so heavily on numbers of dead in
Asia, but not in Iraq, director of news, Helen Boaden, wrote to one Media
Lens reader:
“I think the real
problem is that the estimates of Iraqi civilian dead are so divergent and so
open to challenge that we find it very hard to quote them in brief news
items. Clearly establishing exact numbers for the tsunami is also almost
impossible but there are government estimates which are being regularly
updated and are not being challenged in the same way.” (Email forwarded to
Media Lens, January 10, 2005)
This is a classic
example of media servility to power. For journalists like Boaden, estimates
are lent credibility precisely because they are government estimates,
whereas non-government estimates (especially those subject to government
attack) are viewed as lacking in comparable credibility. The Lancet study
was published by one of the most highly respected scientific journals in the
world. But if cynical vested interests launch crass and baseless attacks,
these are sufficient to make the findings “so open to challenge.”
To be fair, the logic
is at least consistent -- if authority is the final arbiter of right and
wrong, then it is only right that common sense and rational thought be
discarded in deference to the same authority.
It is worth
considering that every time we see the swathes of destruction from Aceh in
Indonesia that these images are comparable to the scenes of utter
devastation that we are not being shown from Iraq. And yet, as
Jenkins points out, the slaughter in Iraq is even more appalling, even more
worthy of our horror and compassion, for the simple reason that it was
entirely man-made, entirely avoidable. US secretary of state, Colin Powell,
declared of the tsunami disaster zone: “I've been in war and I've been
through a number of hurricanes, tornadoes and other relief operations, but
I've never seen anything like this.” (“Powell
tours devastated city of Banda Aceh,” USA Today, January 9, 2005)
With Fallujah fresh in
everyone’s minds, the media failed to make the obvious point. Iraqi doctor
Ali Fadhil, however, reports from the shattered city:
“By 10am we were
inside the city. It was completely devastated, destruction everywhere. It
looked like a city of ghosts. Falluja used to be a modern city; now there
was nothing. We spent the day going through the rubble that had been the
centre of the city; I didn't see a single building that was functioning.” (Fadhil,
“City of ghosts,” The Guardian, January 11, 2005)
This was done by human
beings, illegally, in contravention of the Geneva convention. Perhaps Powell
had forgotten about Fallujah. Perhaps the media had, too.
Dwarfing The Tsunami –
Climate Catastrophe
The tsunami of
December provides a very real warning, for the horrors of consumer-driven
climate change threaten not just Asia but the entire world with devastation
that dwarfs what we have just seen. The worst disaster last year was not the
Asian tsunami, nor even Iraq; it was the world’s failure, yet again, to
respond to the potentially terminal threat of climate change.
On December 31, the
British government's chief scientific adviser, Sir David King, told BBC
Radio: “What is happening in the Indian Ocean underlines the importance
of the earth’s system to our ability to live safely.” (“Tsunami highlights
climate change risk, says scientist,” Press Association, The Guardian,
December 31, 2004)
King warned that the
melting of the Greenland ice sheet will raise global sea levels by six to
seven metres but other effects of global warming, such as increased storms
and flooding, are already happening.
Last year, the world's
second-largest reinsurer, Swiss Re, warned that the costs of global warming
threatened to spiral out of control. The economic costs of global warming
threatened to double to $150 billion (£81 billion) a year in 10 years,
hitting insurers with $30-40 billion in claims, or the equivalent of one
World Trade Centre attack annually. Swiss Re observed:
“There is a danger
that human intervention will accelerate and intensify natural climate
changes to such a point that it will become impossible to adapt our
socio-economic systems in time. The human race can lead itself into this
climatic catastrophe - or it can avert it.”
Over the next 50
years, global warming could kill a quarter of land animals and plants.
According to a four-year research project by scientists from eight
countries, published in the prestigious journal Nature last January,
1 million species will be doomed to extinction by 2050. The findings were
described as "terrifying" by the report's lead author, Chris Thomas,
professor of conservation biology at Leeds University. Professor Thomas
said:
“When scientists set
about research they hope to come up with definite results, but what we found
we wish we had not. It was far, far worse than we thought, and what we have
discovered may even be an underestimate." (Quoted, Paul Brown, “An
unnatural disaster,” The Guardian, January 8, 2004)
The problem is that
the human race is being prevented from taking action by its oldest and most
stubborn enemy -- institutionalized greed.
The Guardian’s
environment editor, Paul Brown, wrote in his 1996 book, Global Warming:
Can Civilization Survive?:
“At every meeting
anywhere in the world where climate change is to be discussed the oil
industry is there... Their brief is simply to slow down the business of
doing something about climate change as much as possible.” (Paul Brown,
Global Warming: Can Civilization Survive?, Blandford, 1996, p.176)
If this had been al
Qaeda plotting attacks with consequences that could annihilate a billion
human beings, our newspapers and TV channels would be packed with analysis
of their ‘evil’ machinations and of how best to stop them. But because we
have a corporate ‘free press’ reporting on the corporate maniacs
responsible, the public know next to nothing about the deep business
opposition to Kyoto, the business subversion of democratic politics that
might otherwise oppose the insanity, and the business strangulation of a
mass media system that might otherwise inform the public about the insanity.
Thus Alan Wood,
economics editor of Australia’s wretched Murdoch-owned newspaper, The
Australian, can write, even now: “... given the considerable uncertainty
about the causes, the future extent and consequences of global warming, it
would be irresponsible for any Australian government to sign up to Kyoto
when it is impossible to say if the costs of doing so will exceed the
benefits.” (Wood, “Investors slugged by flawed climate goals,” The
Australian, November 23, 2004)
Writing before Asia’s
tsunami, historian Will Durant observed:
“Civilization exists
by geologic consent, subject to change without notice." (Quoted, David Hale,
“Waves of Change,” The New York Times, January 7, 2005)
But there is an
infinitely more relevant truth to which we had best wake up in one very
great hurry: civilization exists by climatological consent, subject to
no-notice and perhaps irreversible change.
Media Lens is a UK-based media watchdog group headed by David
Edwards and David Cromwell. Visit the Media Lens website (www.medialens.org)
and consider supporting their invaluable work (www.medialens.org/donate.html).
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