The Command Post
Iraq
September 04, 2004
Politically Incorrect Observations on Reporting in the German Media

[The following editorial was written by David Kaspar. It orginally appeared here and is reprinted with permission of the author.]

Beslan, Russia: A Liberal Guide to Better Understanding Freedom Fighters

At this very moment it is too early to know the precise number of hostage takers killed or captured.

In any case, it is important to keep some simple liberal rules in mind just in case one or more freedom fighters survived the attacks by the Russian police and were taken into custody:

1. We may not condone their killings - if there were any at all -, but we have to look for the root causes for a better understanding of their behavior. Were they inconvenienced in practicing their religion? Delays during rush hour in Chechnya? Election losses? Only if we know exactly what drove these young men and women to their somewhat regrettable actions can we make a final judgment.

2. Avoid the term "terrorists" for the hostage takers by all means. They have families with mothers and fathers, brothers and sisters, and it would be a great disservice for them to have their relatives labeled with derogative terms.

3. The hostage takers have full rights for proper legal procedure. They should be assigned the best lawyers available, preferably from France or Germany. Both countries have a proud tradition of setting proven terrorists free, either as a result of faulty court hearings or by giving in to blackmail.

4. It must be investigated in full detail if Putin is behind the hostage taking. He has every interest in the world to appear as a hardliner, and he desperately needed another victory over Chechnyan freedom fighters. While this is only a non-confirmed hypothesis so far, we have not heard any rejection of it from official Russian government sources - which is quite telling in itself, of course.

5. There can be no - repeat: NO - capital punishment for the hostage takers. Capital punishment is a cruel and inhuman act that violates the human rights of the accused.

6. We request that an internationally reputable organization such as the Red Cross be permitted to monitor conditions and report cases of abuse and torture in the prison where the hostage takers are held.

7. Free flow of information between the imprisoned hostage takers and their peers from Al Qaida must be permitted at all times. Access to telecommunications and the internet must be guaranteed.

8. The search for a political solution of the conflict is imperative. Meetings between representatives of the Russian government and the hostage takers, under the supervision of the United Nations, are the only way out of the crisis. The cycle of violence has got to stop!

We will keep you posted on any human rights violations by the Russian government. The hostage takers deserve a fair and transparent legal procedure.

You may throw up now...

_____________

David Kaspar is the author the weblog David's Medienkritik: Politically Incorrect Observations on Reporting in the German Media

Posted By Michele Catalano at September 4, 2004 07:20 AM | TrackBack
Comments

Why do libs call politically correct politically incorrect? This guy is more pc than Bill Maher.

Posted by: jones [TypeKey Profile Page] at September 4, 2004 08:37 AM

I think the author was being sarcastic. Invert each point to get the point he is really making.

Posted by: CERDIP [TypeKey Profile Page] at September 4, 2004 11:56 AM

Jones? the writers true feelings are shown his last words.

"You may throw up now…"

Might be the message satrical as it was rang so true that you were seeing nothing but red at the end of it (know I was) and missed his ending

Posted by: Dan Kauffman [TypeKey Profile Page] at September 4, 2004 08:20 PM

Truth is more sickening than fiction.

http://uk.news.yahoo.com/040904/325/f1×2p.html

Russia blasts EU siege statement

Click to enlarge photo

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia has described as "blasphemous" a request by the European Union for an explanation to the bloody end to a mass hostage seizure at a school by Chechen gunmen.

More than 320 people, almost half of them children were found dead after troops stormed a school in the southern Russian town of Beslan, where the separatists held more than 1,000 hostages for 53 hours.

In a statement in the name of the presidency of the 25-nation EU, Dutch Foreign Minister Bernard Bot said on Friday that all countries should work together to stop such tragedies.

"But we also would like to know from the Russian authorities how this tragedy could have happened," he added.

The Russian Foreign Ministry reacted with outrage on Saturday.

"Mr. Bot's elaborations are an absolute contrast with the wide international support and solidarity with Russia in these tragic days," the ministry statement said.

"Inappropriate statements by the Dutch minister look odious ... and blasphemous," it added. "We expect explanations from the Dutch side."

Interfax news agency later said that the Dutch ambassador had been summoned to the Foreign ministry over Bot's statement

Posted by: Dan Kauffman [TypeKey Profile Page] at September 4, 2004 08:23 PM

OH. I thought that was Michelle's comment.

Um,

Carry on.

Thanks.

Posted by: jones [TypeKey Profile Page] at September 4, 2004 09:29 PM

Europeans are encouraged to keep their traps shut until they have made up their minds which side of the War on Terror they've decided to join.

Provided they're not bred out fo existence in the meantime....

Posted by: torpedo_eight [TypeKey Profile Page] at September 5, 2004 07:10 PM

..what if Putin told the EU go **** themselves and pulled out and had a pow-wow with W and set up a new economic bloc..esp. with the oil reserves and natural gas.Hard currency to invest in modernization.Keep our energy costs in check;provide a stable economy,sky`s the limit for both of us...not to mention a alliance that could possibly double NATO ...I know NATO aint real high on my list either but ...one some times must hold your nose and take your medicine...

Posted by: Rob_NC [TypeKey Profile Page] at September 7, 2004 08:26 PM

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