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Double Standard for Hispanic Media? Miami Scandal Puts Journalists Under Fire

by Elena Shore, New American Media (reposted)
Hispanic journalists are debating the firing of three El Nuevo Herald journalists who received payments from the U.S. government. Many applaud the journalists' dismissal, while others see a vicious double standard at work. Elena Shore is a writer for New America Media.
SAN FRANCISCO--Latino journalists are concerned that a scandal at the Spanish-language newspaper El Nuevo Herald in Miami could have serious negative effects on the image of Hispanic media nationally.

On Sept. 7, three journalists were fired from El Nuevo Herald for receiving payments from the U.S. government to appear on Radio and TV Marti, the U.S.-sponsored anti-Castro broadcast to Cuba.

El Nuevo Herald was founded by Knight Ridder in 1987, redesigned from El Herald, a free insert in the Miami Herald. Unlike some Spanish-English sister papers that share information and integrate their news teams, observers say the papers have remained completely separate.

Many Latino journalists applaud the crackdown, saying no journalist should take money from the government. Others say the situation is more complicated, and reflects a double standard in place for judging Hispanic media.

As they debate the issue, all agree that the incident threatens the image of Hispanic media, which is already misunderstood by some.

"What amazed me about this incident," says Alejandro Manrique, editor of the Spanish-language Rumbo newspaper in San Antonio, Tex., "is that this was not the first time this happened: It was very common for people at El Nuevo Herald to make comments on Radio Martí." Even though what they did was wrong, adds Manrique, "it's hard if people have been doing this for years to suddenly punish these three journalists. This is a grey area. It's not black and white."

A Sept. 8 article in The Miami Herald revealed that at least 10 journalists from Hispanic media outlets in South Florida, including three from El Nuevo Herald, have been regularly paid to participate in programs on Radio and TV Martí, the U.S.-government sponsored broadcast to Cuba. The article compared the journalists to Armstrong Williams, the talk-show host who received $240,000 to promote President Bush's No Child Left Behind education program in 2004.

Since 2001, El Nuevo Herald staff reporter Pablo Alfonso, who wrote an opinion column and covered Cuba, was paid almost $175,000 to host programs on Radio and TV Martí. During the same time period, staff writer Wilfredo Cancio, who covered the Cuban exile community and politics, received almost $15,000; Olga Connor, a freelance reporter who wrote about Cuban culture, was paid about $71,000. Both Alfonso and Cancio were dismissed, and Connor's relationship with The Miami Herald was terminated.

"There was a rush to pass judgment" among the mainstream media, says Jeannette Rivera-Lyles, a reporter for the Orlando Sentinel who worked at El Nuevo Herald from 1997 to 2003. Rather than sparking a discussion about ethics, she says publications across the country leapt on the story as "another Armstrong Williams case," smearing the journalists' names without knowing the whole story.

In Miami, the newspaper's decision to fire the journalists generated hundreds of letters of protest and canceled subscriptions.

In an open letter to the Miami Herald and the McClatchy Company, and signed by hundreds of journalists at El Nuevo Herald and other media outlets, protesters accuse the Sept. 8 Miami Herald article of "yellow journalism."

The letter, online at
http://www.apoyoaperiodistasdelnuevoherald.blogspot.com, says the Miami Herald article "creates the false impression that the professional work of these colleagues (for TV and Radio Martí) was a clandestine political operation."

"I sat 20 feet across from them for six years," says Rivera-Lyles. "This was no secret. This was not something they hid in any way. It was openly discussed in the newsroom." Rivera-Lyles adds, "There was no specific policy precluding journalists at El Nuevo Herald from being able to work for Radio or TV Martí."

In fact, in 2002, both the Miami Herald and El Nuevo Herald published stories that quoted Radio Martí employees, among them Pablo Alfonso and Olga Connor, two of the journalists recently dismissed.

"I have no idea why this is happening now," says Rivera-Lyles. "This is the most bizarre thing ever."

Some journalists say comparisons to the Armstrong Williams case are inaccurate. "By definition a conflict of interest is when you compromise your position on something or compromise what you do in exchange for something," says Rivera-Lyles. "They were paid for rendering professional services, not to stick to certain talking points, discuss a certain issue or promote anybody's agenda. I do not believe they compromised their integrity," says Rivera-Lyles, who adds the journalists appeared on news, culture and literature shows, far from political propaganda.

Many well-known journalists for English-language newspapers and magazines have "for many, many years" received payment from the U.S. government to appear on the government-sponsored Voice of America radio program, a sister broadcast of Radio Martí, according to a report in the Sept. 14 edition of El Nuevo Herald. One of these, David Lightman, chief of the Washington, D.C., bureau for Connecticut's Hartford Courant, has since resigned from Voice of America.

"No one would have dared to put the name of the Washington, D.C., bureau chief of the Hartford Courant next to Armstrong Williams," says Rivera-Lyles. "There is a clear double standard here. Spanish media is treated as if they were second class citizens in this case."

Read More
http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=9c929e3b03c9d15f8d733f3432ae273e
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