Posted By James Downie Share

The world media has been full of accounts and opinions about the ouster of Honduran President Manuel Zelaya. But inside his own country, it's a different story.

In Honduras, some of the most popular and influential television stations and radio networks blacked out coverage or adhered to the de facto government's line that Manuel Zelaya's overthrow was not a coup but a legal "constitutional substitution," press freedom advocates and Honduran journalists said.

Meanwhile, soldiers raided the offices of radio and TV stations loyal to Zelaya, shutting down their signals. Alejandro Villatoro, 52, the owner of Radio Globo, said soldiers broke down doors and dismantled video surveillance cameras.

"They grabbed me and put me face down and put six rifles on me, with a foot on my back holding me down," he said. "It was like I was a common criminal."

Such allegations underscore the one-sided nature of the news that has been served up to Hondurans during the crisis. According to results of a Gallup poll published here Thursday, 41 percent of Hondurans think the ouster was justified, with 28 opposed to it.

Global Post's Ioan Grillo was on top of this story earlier this week, and also notes that some of the biggest commercial networks didn't need any help dumping on Zelaya, as they have been at war with him for a long time. In addition:

[T]he media battle over the Honduras coup also reflects larger news-related issues as leftist governments have risen to power in the region.

Longstanding commercial networks controlled by wealthy families have often had head-on collisions with leftist leaders, who accuse them of undermining their governments.

In reaction, business interests accuse stations controlled by leftist presidents of demonizing the rich and dividing nations along class lines.

“The media across Latin America has become much more polarized in recent years. There is more of an atmosphere of saying, “You have to be with us or against us,” said Elan Reyes, president of Honduras’ journalist association.

ORLANDO SIERRA/AFP/Getty Images

 
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SECURITYLATAM

12:38 PM ET

July 10, 2009

Underneath Honduras

On Honduras, I think it’s important to keep in mind that there is a serious public security problem underneath this political fiasco. It’s one that neither Zelaya or his replacement can tackle alone.

I’m talking about an assassination school run by x-military and cops; a relaxed visa requirement for China, Russia, the Dominican Republic and other countries known for org. crime; documentation falsification- birth certificated and nat’l ID cards; declining remittances; an average of 3,500 Hondurans deported from the US every month in 2009; and, at least 6.5 metric tons of cocaine seized in the country in 2009 alone (which represents probably less than a fourth of all coke traffic in Honduras). I could go on!

Mainstream media should dig into some of this stuff. Democracy in Honduras is important, but it’s worth zip and just window dressing if there’s no security to underpin the civil contract between society and state.

These days, most Hondurans have two choices: leave the country or join organized crime.

There’s a serious problem when it’s easier to get a job as an assassin than as a mechanic, a doctor, or a teacher…

 

BLUE13326

7:03 PM ET

July 10, 2009

The US media writing a story

The US media writing a story about another country's one-sided coverage?

Pot. Kettle. You're black.

 

EXPATYANK

8:36 PM ET

July 10, 2009

News blackout in Honduras

If the news is being blacked out. Since I am in Honduras how did I find out about this.. The only thing the Roberto Micheletti supporters want is for all outside media to read the HONDURAN constitution before they make any judgment. I am aware that a very large number of people wearing blue and white shirts with their children in tow is not near as likely to sell news copy as a small group of rock throwing masked thugs. A military soldier pointing a gun at a news photographer attempting to enter a secured area sells much better than thousands of those blue and white shirted citizens of Honduras holding their hands over their hearts with tears streaming down their face and singing the national anthem will not sell as well as one Molotove cocktail being thrown at someone. All the majority of Hondurans want the new media to do is tell the truth the whole truth.

 

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