| Author | Message | | Fishy | | Posted: Sat May 25, 2002 5:37 pm Post subject: Adnan Khashoggi |
| Hi all, I wanted to share a few things that might shed some light onto how we've arrived at the sorry state we now find ourselves in. Let's have a look at "daddy", King Bush the first, shall we? As I realize what country I'm posting this in, I'll just have to lead you in the right direction. Go to any reliable search engine, and type in ADNAN KHASHOGGI. You'll find hours of fact-filled entertainment there. Below is an article about what has happened to someone that had the cajones to expose this in the UK press. British Paper Sued over Story on Mining Co.'s Rights Abuses Source: Gregory Palast Posted: July 5, 2001 June 29, 2001 -- In retaliation for the investigative story about the finances of the George W. Bush campaign, Barrick Gold Mining of Canada has sued my paper, the Observer of London, for libel. The company, which hired the elder Bush after his leaving the White House, is charging the newspaper with libel for quoting an Amnesty International report, which alleged that 50 miners might have been buried alive in Tanzania by a company now owned by Barrick. The company has also demanded the Observer and its parent, Guardian Newspapers, force me to remove the article from my US website, a frightening extension of Britain's punitive libel laws into the World Wide Web. The company has also issued legal threats against Tanzanian human rights lawyer Tundu Lissu, one of the Observer's independent sources and an investigator of the mine-site allegations. The attack by Barrick and its controversial Chairman, Peter Munk, one of the wealthiest men in Canada, who boasts of his propensity to sue, also aims to gag my reporting on his company's purchase of rights to a gold mine in Nevada -- containing $10 billion in gold -- for a payment of under $10,000 to the US Treasury. My Observer story, ''Best Democracy Money Can Buy,'' looked into the activities of several corporations linked to the Bushes. It was in that article I first disclosed that over 50,000 Florida voters, most of them Black, were wrongly tagged as 'felons,' and targeted for removal from the voter rolls. My follow-up reports in Salon.com, The Nation, and the Washington Post as well as on BBC-TV's Newsnight provided the basis for the US Civil Rights Commission finding of massive, wrongful voter disenfranchisement in Florida. My entire continuing investigation is in jeopardy. It is difficult to imagine how my paper, owned by the non-profit Scott Trust, myself and human rights lawyer Lissu can withstand the financial punishment of litigation by the centi-millionaire Munk and his corporation. In its latest Annual report, Amnesty says it cannot verify the allegations of the mine killings because the government continues to resist an independent investigation. Yet Barrick wants our paper to state what we know to be untrue: that independent investigation found the charges completely baseless. Yet our quoting Amnesty is no defense. Americans cannot conceive of the medieval operation of British libel law. It does not permit the defense of ''repetition'' - straightforward reporting on the statements of human rights groups are banned, a gag nearly as effective as Burmese law. Independently of Amnesty, attorney Lissu went to the mine site and provided our paper with witness statements. Tanzanians have offered their services to help defend against censorship in Britain, a poignant reversal for our paper which, with imperial pomp, has launched a 'Press Freedom Campaign' to excoriate developing nations over gagging journalists. '10 Little Piggies,' Adnan Khashoggi, and The Greatest Gold Heist Since Butch Cassidy Peter Munk's reputation precedes him. Last year, Mother Jones named him one of America's 'Ten Little Piggies' for his US gold mine's literally 'poisoning the water' through what environmentalists consider polluting extraction practices. How Barrick got the gold mine is something they would rather we not report. First, Munk was set up in the gold business by funds from Saudi arms dealer Adnan Khashoggi. We are being sued for discussing this connection although the information comes from Peter Munk himself, quoted in his biography. Second, Barrick struck it rich when the company used (or misused, say many) an old Gold Rush law to claim rights on a Nevada mine containing $10 billion in gold by paying the US Treasury less than $10,000. They are suing my paper for publicizing this extraordinary transaction, which US Interior Secretary of the Interior Bruce Babbitt called, ''the biggest gold heist since the days of Butch Cassidy,'' and ''a form of legalized extortion.'' Barrick's suit claims the Observer libeled them by failing to state that Barrick had to spend money to buy other rights and equipment to dig the gold out of the ground. What an odd misreading of our words. We never said the US government mailed the gold bars to Barrick in Canada. We only said that Barrick got the gold mine and the public got the shaft. The company's CEO has also demanded his lawyers slice a pound of our journalistic flesh for mentioning that he, ''made his name in Canada in the 1960s as the figure in an infamous insider stock-trading scandal.'' Yet, we read this in the Canadian magazine Macleans: ''The failure of [Clairetone Corporation] cost Munk his business and his reputation. Most damning were allegations of insider trading that were made after it was discovered that he and [his partner] had sold shares in 1967 just before some of Clairetone's most serious problems became known.'' Lynching by Libel Law The clear purpose of the suit is, as Barrick says, to force the Observer to say the investigation ''should never have been published'' an inquiry into those who purchase the favor and influence of the Bush family, not just Barrick. The article was about the blizzard of money whirling around a family of Presidents and their associations. Among other paid favors for Barrick, the former President wrote the dictator Suharto to convince him, successfully, to grant another gold concession to Barrick. And more than Barrick came into our investigative cross hairs. There was Chevron Corporation, and ChoicePoint, the firm at the center of the racially charged voter purge in Florida. This suit with malicious tone attempts to besmirch our entire investigation and to undermine ours and others further investigations into Bush and Barrick. The Observer's official history quotes a media critic's statement that the papers new editor,''...is expected to continue the paper's tradition of crusading reporting as in the Lobbygate investigate investigation.'' In that 'Lobbygate' story, well known in the UK, I went undercover with my partner Antony Barnett to expose corruption at the heart of the Blair cabinet. But the wrath of a Prime Minister is easy to dismiss - and our awards were a pleasant salve. The withering, costly pounding of an enraged corporate power with too much money to spend has chilled reporters' and British newspapers' will to take on the tougher investigative matters. Amnesty is, ''silent on the advice of lawyers.'' And so, the witness statements of those who watched the bodies exhumed, and one who dug his way from the mass grave, will now also remain entombed in legal silence. How much longer I can hold the line if abandoned by the Guardian's Scott Trust - which is cracking under the weight of legal bills - I cannot say. And the consequences of capitulation to our source and defender, Tundu Lissu and his Tanzanian human rights organization, we cannot imagine. Contact: Gregory.palast@guardian.co.uk www.GregPalast.com | |  | | admin | | Posted: Sun May 26, 2002 12:35 am Post subject: Something else to think about |
| Try watching this and then imagine yourself in the movie. No war is worth it and, whatever people tell you, there is always an alterntive to armed conflict. Leaders wage war, normal people die as a result. Our leaders, whatever nationality and in all but the rarest instances are an abomination. There are billions of us and only a few of them. How did this control come about and what can we do to take back the planet from monstrous tyrants like Bush, Saddam, Blair, Sharon etc...? http://homepage.mac.com/jschoneb/wtc.html :x _________________ Contact help@itszone.co.uk if you require support or wish to draw attention to any illegal messages or activity taking place in any of the forums. YOU MUST BE AGED 18 OR ABOVE TO PARTICIPATE IN THIS FORUM. | |  | | Fishy | | Posted: Sun May 26, 2002 5:15 pm Post subject: |
| Try watching this and then imagine yourself in the movie. No war is worth it and, whatever people tell you, there is always an alterntive to armed conflict. Leaders wage war, normal people die as a result. Our leaders, whatever nationality and in all but the rarest instances are an abomination. There are billions of us and only a few of them. How did this control come about and what can we do to take back the planet from monstrous tyrants like Bush, Saddam, Blair, Sharon etc...? That's a powerful clip. As for how do we take back the planet? The first step is a mass mobilization, and reeducation of the public. Most of them (where I sit) have been duped. A lot of people are waking up, which is encouraging, but not nearly enough. Here's what's on the schedule here for this week: http://www.internationalanswer.org/news/update/050102juneconf.html This is an emergency national anti-war conference being held in New York on Saturday, where we will analyze the Bush administration, and try to come up with a plan to stop them. We really only have one media outlet to get the word out, Pacifica Radio, the internet & taking it to the streets seems to be the only way to reach the public at large. April 20th in Washington DC got mainstream media attention, because they simply couldn't ignore 100,000 people marching on the Capitol. see also www.notinourname.net They are organizing a refuse and resist pledge nationwide on June 6th at 8pm. If enough people get off their butts and just do it, people will take notice. | |  | | admin | | Posted: Sun May 26, 2002 5:19 pm Post subject: That's Good News |
| Will you keep us up to date on how you get on? Positive feedback promotes positive action. If a few more people can be convinced that they do have a meaningful say in how we all decide to live out our lives on this planet a critical mass could be achieved and the tide would become unstoppable. Every little thing helps. :) _________________ Contact help@itszone.co.uk if you require support or wish to draw attention to any illegal messages or activity taking place in any of the forums. YOU MUST BE AGED 18 OR ABOVE TO PARTICIPATE IN THIS FORUM. | |  | | Fishy | | Posted: Mon May 27, 2002 5:33 pm Post subject: Re: That's Good News |
| | admin wrote: | | Will you keep us up to date on how you get on? Positive feedback promotes positive action. If a few more people can be convinced that they do have a meaningful say in how we all decide to live out our lives on this planet a critical mass could be achieved and the tide would become unstoppable. Every little thing helps. :) | I will let you all know if anything of value comes out of the conference. Getting the word out thorugh writing op-ed articles, letters to the editor, peaceful demonstrations, bringing listeners to non-corporate owned radio/cable television, and trying to get sympathetic members of congress (there are a few) to influence the others is the key. The truth is staring everyone right in the face, we just need to find a way to make everyone open their eyes and look at it. The famous anthropologist Margaret Meade once said " Never doubt that a small group of committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that has." | |  | | | ©2002-2009 WarWithoutEnd.co.uk |