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#17 - JRL 9050 - JRL Home
RIA Novosti
February 4, 2005
BRITISH DAIS FOR BESLAN MURDERER
MOSCOW (RIA Novosti political commentator Vladimir Simonov) - On Thursday,
Britain's Channel 4 broadcast a long interview with Shamil Basayev, in an open
and deliberate form of information support for international terrorism.
Shockingly, the program was initiated by British journalists, who worked hard
to give an opportunity to appear on TV to a man who is responsible for the death
of 320 victims in Beslan in autumn 2004, assumed responsibility for the Nord-Ost
hostage taking in autumn 2002, shot dozens of patients in a Budennovsk hospital
in 1995, and is guilty of dozens of other equally horrifying acts.
This is a terrorist of Osama bin Laden's magnitude. Russia has placed $10
million on his head. But a respected British channel wanted him as a talking
head so much that it compiled a list of questions, which was handed over to a
Basayev envoy in a European capital. Four months later, the efforts of British
agents were rewarded: They were told to go to a tiny shop in a Middle Eastern
town, where they got a CD of Basayev's lazy voice telling them he was preparing
more Beslan-scale tragedies.
In fact, the terrorist is preparing his hideous acts hand-in-glove with
British television. Addressing the world with the help of the British channel,
he seemed to be saying everyone who heard him: I am alive and ready to accept
more money from sponsors. Money and weapons, which will flow to Basayev now, can
be marked "With the kind assistance of Channel 4."
Moscow called on British television to stop acting as the mouthpiece of
international terrorism and one of its most horrible leaders. But London
replied, first, that it cannot influence the actions of an independent
television channel, and second, that it does not intend to infringe on the
freedom of speech. I like the wording, especially because London journalists
know very well that the leaders of Channel 4, just as the BBC's board of
governors, have cordial relations with Whitehall and are always ready to respect
its recommendations.
The Foreign Office can say out loud that the British government firmly
denounces the terrorist activities of Mr. Basayev and recall that Britain agreed
to put his name on the black list of the UN Security Council's Counter-Terrorism
Committee. But this will not hide the apparent truth that London still divides
terrorists into good (who bother Russia) and bad (who threaten the West).
The occupation authorities in Iraq (Britain is playing second fiddle to the
U.S. there) promptly closure the Al-Jazeera bureau in Baghdad because it
allegedly promoted bin Laden. But according to London's logic, promoting Basayev
is quite admissible because his grenade-throwers are targeted not at the West
but at Russia.
The television show with Basayev's interview is not unlike other
double-standard actions of London, such as granting political asylum to Akhmed
Zakayev, a former leader of Chechen bandits, and issuing travel documents under
a different name to Boris Berezovsky, a magnate on the wanted list of Russian
prosecutors.
On April 10, 1992 the IRA blew up the Baltic Exchange in the City. What would
the British authorities have said if Channel One on Russian television had
showed an interview with the leader of the IRA cell that had planted the bomb? A
man in a black T-shirt with the word "Anti-colonialism" written on it would say
calmly about his plans for a dozen more such effective blasts. This would be the
freedom of speech in its pure British meaning.
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