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In
June 2007, the Palestine Media Collective produced a newspaper
parody of The Vancouver Sun that satirized the
anti-Palestinian bias of CanWest, the largest media conglomerate
in Canada. One example was an article entitled "Study Shows Truth
Biased Against Israel" by Cyn Sorsheep. Six months later, CanWest
launched a lawsuit against those who "conspired" to produce and
distribute the parody. The original writ named Mordecai Briemberg,
Horizon Publications (the printer), and six Jane and John Does.
CanWest Mediaworks Publications is the parent company of the
Global television network, ten large market and national daily
newspapers, 25 community newspapers, and 20 specialty television
channels. Canwest bought Canada's largest newspaper chain from
Conrad Black in 2000 and in 2007 purchased Alliance Atlantis, one
of Canada's largest specialty television operators.
We stated publicly that the two of us were solely responsible for
producing the newspaper parody, and CanWest has added our names to
the lawsuit. We maintain that the parody was the exercise of the
"fundamental freedom" under the Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms "of thought, belief, opinion, and expression, including
freedom of the press and other media of communication." Although
we have confirmed that Mordecai Briemberg was not involved in
producing the parody, Canwest has refused to drop its suit against
him.
We decided to create the satirical publication after a November
2006 trip to the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT) to assist
Palestinian families trying to harvest olives on their ancestral
lands. Some of the olive groves had been untended for more than
five years because Palestinian farmers were killed or due to other
violent intimidation from Israeli settlers and soldiers.
One morning, we could not reach a nearby village to help pick
olives because the road was blocked by Israeli military vehicles
attacking al-Ein refugee camp. We witnessed Israeli soldiers
abducting two Palestinian medical volunteers and holding them
hostage in their armored vehicle. The Israeli invasion killed a
young Palestinian man that morning, and their tanks wantonly
destroyed vehicles and buildings in the densely populated and
impoverished refugee camp.
When we returned home to Vancouver, we were appalled by CanWest's
one-sided coverage of the situation we had just witnessed in the
OPT. In CanWest publications, Israelis are almost always portrayed
as innocent victims and Palestinians as inhuman terrorists. We saw
no reflection of our experiences with the Palestinian families who
shared their lunch with us in the shade of gnarled olive trees,
nor of the violent gangs of Israeli settler youth who stoned and
kicked international volunteers and Palestinian farmers while
Israeli soldiers stood by.
A study released in 2006 by Toronto's Near East Cultural and
Educational Foundation quantified the shocking bias of CanWest
news. It determined that during 2004, CanWest's flagship
National Post was 89 times more likely to report an Israeli
child's death than that of a Palestinian child in its news
articles' headlines or first paragraphs.
In other words, the CanWest "news coverage" made it appear that
Israeli kids were killed at a rate almost four times higher than
Palestinian children during 2004 when, in fact, 22 Palestinian
children were killed for every Israeli child that year, according
to the Israeli human rights group B'Tselem. As a 3 March 2008
Post editorial noted, "in any war, it is the child casualties
that attract the greatest sympathy and anguish."
In Vancouver, CanWest dominates the news market through ownership
of The Vancouver Sun, The Province, The National
Post, and 12 community newspapers, as well as Global TV. Media
researcher Marc Edge has called Vancouver the most concentrated
metropolitan media market in any G8 country. With so few
alternative news sources, we concluded that a newspaper parody
would be the best method to point out CanWest's extreme bias.
CanWest newspapers have recently devoted significant space to
pontificating about free speech. But while CanWest defends of free
speech with one hand, it uses the courts to attack freedom of
speech for those who disagree with its position on Palestine and
Israel with the other.
A 26 May 2008 National Post editorial worried about a case
involving Scientology protests in England: "the principles of free
expression have to be guarded stringently in a liberal democracy."
The National Post approvingly quoted Canadian Supreme Court
justice Ian Binnie on 28 June 2008, regarding a defamation suit:
"When controversies erupt, statements of claim often follow as
night follows day, not only in serious claims but in actions
launched simply for the purpose of intimidation ... chilling
debate on matters of legitimate public interest."
A 2 July 2008 Province editorial worried that "free speech
is significantly endangered" by human rights commissions "driven
by political agendas." However, in CanWest's view, free speech is
not endangered by Canada's largest media corporation suing
political satirists who challenge its anti-Palestinian political
agenda.
The Vancouver Sun
publisher Kevin Bent tried to explain away the double standard in
a 6 June memo to employees. "Some have tried to portray this
action as an attack on free speech ... we believe this argument is
a red herring ... Throughout Canada, when the voice of others has
been stifled, CanWest has funded lawsuits to protect the right to
free speech." The true red herring is his argument that CanWest's
defense of free speech elsewhere means it can't be attacking it in
our case.
CanWest claims this lawsuit is about trademarks. But the
Trade-Marks Act is intended to adjudicate between competing
commercial interests, not to pass judgment on political debates.
CanWest's original writ reveals the political nature of the suit
by referring to the alleged political positions of the defendants
five times but only twice mentioning the Trade-Marks Act.
Prominent Canadian freedom-of-information organizations, including
the British Columbia Civil Liberties Association (BCCLA), and
Quebec's Ligue des droits et libertes, disagree with Bent's view
and have called on CanWest to drop its lawsuit. A BCCLA 23 April
open letter to CanWest stated "the BCCLA views the CanWest lawsuit
to be an ill-advised attempt by CanWest to use the courts to
silence satirical criticism and constrain fair comment." The Ligue
des droits et libertes said: "We consider that CanWest's suit is
an attempt to crush dissenting opinion through legal proceedings
... This abuse of the judicial system is what is known as a
Strategic Lawsuit against Public Participation (SLAPP)."
CanWest's attack must also be seen in the context of the larger
campaign to restrict free public debate on Palestine and Israel in
Canada. Recent examples include McMaster University's
administration's campus ban of the phrase "Israeli Apartheid"
during 2008's international Israeli Apartheid Week and last year's
cancellation, by the president of Minneapolis's University of St.
Thomas, of Nobel Peace Prize winner Desmond Tutu's speech to the
Justice and Peace Studies program.
The world needs to hear from eminent statesmen such as Archbishop
Tutu -- after a recent visit to Gaza, he called the humanitarian
situation of 1.5 million Palestinian civilians trapped by the
Israeli siege an "abomination." In addition, former United States
President Jimmy Carter labeled it "one of the greatest
human-rights crimes on Earth."
Instead, CanWest continues to crank up the anti-Palestinian
rhetoric. After a five-day period when the Israeli military killed
25 Palestinian children in Gaza (according to the Palestinian
Centre for Human Rights), a 3 March 2008 National Post
editorial declared that "Israel is blameless." According to
CanWest, the "arithmetic" of how many Palestinian children are
killed by Israeli missiles and tanks is overridden by the "moral
calculus" of the "Palestinian people as one collective suicide
bomber."
A healthy democracy requires a full and open debate of
contentious issues, and values the contribution political satire
makes to that debate. As Canadian Supreme Court Justice Binnie
wrote in June 2008: "the law must accommodate commentators such as
the satirist or the cartoonist who ... exercise a democratic right
to poke fun at those who huff and puff in the public arena."
Carel Moiseiwitsch is a Vancouver activist and visual artist who
has exhibited internationally. She was a freelance editorial
illustrator for
The Vancouver Sun and Province
for over a decade. Gordon Murray is an activist and information
technologist who was involved in alternative publishing for many
years. Both have worked to support indigenous rights in Canada and
around the world for more than 20 years.
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