Mike Presky's weblog : post 447, comments below

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December 30, 2003


A repressive embarrassment.

Via TomDispatch. The Toledo Blade reports on the abusive treatment the US metes out to foreign journalists who make the mistake of arriving here without a visa, which they call A repressive embarrassment.

This is getting to be a widespread problem. Security is one thing, but deliberately hassling and being rude to people simply because they are foreigners is obscene. It's not only embarrassing, it's counter-productive and serves only to increase the growing hostility to America around the world. Not to mention seriously damaging American economic interests. One journalist was just here to review and promote an American movie.

Without notification to foreign media outlets, the immigration and customs people are arresting, detaining, and deporting journalists arriving here without special visas. This is so even when they come from nations whose citizens can stay for up to 90 days without a visa if they are arriving as tourists or on business.

If that threatening form of registration is not enough, members of the press arriving without the visas, which no one told them they needed, are treated like criminals, handcuffed as they’re marched through airports, photographed, fingerprinted, and their DNA taken.

Peter Krobath, chief editor for the Austrian movie magazine Skip, was held overnight in a cold room with 45 others who arrived without the visa. The room had two open toilets, a metal bench, and a concrete bench. He was here to interview movie star Ben Affleck and see the movie Paycheck.

Thomas Sjoerup, a photographer for the Danish paper Ekstra Bladet, was deported after a few hours during which a mugshot, fingerprints, and DNA sample were taken. A French journalist said he and five others from his country were marched across the airport in handcuffs, without belts or laces.

The International Press Institute in Vienna, a media freedom group, has complained not only about Mr. Korbath’s treatment but also, and indeed more important, the fact that only foreign journalists need special visas.

The Brussels-based International Federation of Journalists is about to launch a global campaign against the absurd and repressive rule that casts suspicion on working journalists who come to this country on business as valid as any other traveler’s.

A U.S. embassy official in Vienna said visas have always been required. If that requirement existed, it was more honored in its breach and ought to be rescinded.

It should not take a world media outcry to address this problem. It’s a policy that puts these United States in the ranks of Third World dictatorships.

Probably worse than so-called Third World dictatorships, since they don't usually claim to be a beacon for human rights and the rule of law the way the US does. This situation is out of hand.

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posted by mike on Tuesday, December 30, 2003 at 05:14 PM





Mike Presky's weblog : A repressive embarrassment.

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