Misinformation about Nicaragua and TFA on KPFA Radio

Task Force on the Americas Statement:

 Misinformation about Nicaragua and TFA on KPFA Radio

For 35 years, we at the Task Force on the Americas (TFA) have been supporting popular movements in Latin America and the Caribbean. Also known as the Marin Interfaith Task Force on the Americas (MITF), we are a small grassroots human rights NGO. Our annual $40k budget comes entirely from individual donations.

We were dismayed when a recent program on KPFA, the leading progressive radio station in the Bay Area, contained what appeared to be misinformation about Nicaragua. TFA requested that alternative voices be presented. Instead, the radio station host maligned us on air.

On November 6, Sabrina Jacobs, the host of KFPA’s A Rude Awakening, interviewed the director of the Oakland Institute, Anuradha Mittal. Ms. Mittal outlined points from their Nicaragua’s Failed Revolution report, whose purpose is “to bring to light to the international public and put pressure on countries like the United States which is getting beef which is grown in the autonomous regions [of Nicaragua].”

The Oakland Institute report, whether intentional or not, coincides with a campaign to stop beef imports from Nicaragua. If implemented, it would harm tens of thousands of Nicaraguan farmers and workers. This dovetails with the US government’s regime-change campaign against Nicaragua, Cuba and Venezuela. Using economic sanctions and other tactics, the US tries to make conditions in these countries so onerous that people will renounce their political leaders.

TFA has evidence (references below) that the exported beef does not come from the autonomous zones, as claimed by the Oakland Institute. Rather, the beef comes from the non-tropical cattle raising areas in the center and west of the country with each cow being individually tagged and certified by the national agency. The autonomous zones are areas of the Nicaraguan territory that have been set aside for the indigenous and Afro-descendant peoples.

While there are genuine injustices suffered by the indigenous in Nicaragua, which TFA continues to condemn, these are not official government policy. Nicaragua has set aside a commendable 31% of the national territory for the original peoples. Recent interviews with indigenous leaders in Nicaragua suggest the Oakland Institute report distorts the real situation. (See references below.)

We emailed Ms. Jacobs suggesting that the Oakland Institute’s claims were disputable and requested she interview others on this issue. She did not reply to the TFA email. But four days later, on her weekly program, she incorrectly claimed the TFA email contained no facts or proof. Instead, she invited Ms. Mittal of the Oakland Institute back for a “rebuttal,” while not airing what our claims were.

On the November 13 program, Ms. Mittal condemned the democratically elected government of Nicaragua for being capitalist. Ironically, her report was funded by billionaire Howard G. Buffet. The Oakland Institute received a nearly one quarter of a million-dollar grant from his foundation for their Nicaragua research. The Oakland Institute has been less than transparent about this huge grant. Buffet has been or is director of several corporations with investments in Central America (e.g., Conagra, Coca Cola, and Archer-Daniels-Midland).

Ms. Mittal criticized TFA as “keen to suppress people having access to information” and having “close connections to the Ortega government.” Both claims are incorrect. Ms. Jacobs said TFA was “skewing the facts” and that our letter was “political slander.” Finally, Ms. Mittal suggested that our skepticism about her report “is the kind of paranoia and craziness which unfortunately give a bad name to progressives.”

The issue is not whether to support the Sandinista government; that is for the Nicaraguan people. The issue is what stance should progressives take on the well documented US intervention in Nicaragua.

There is evidence the Oakland Institute report on this issue is inaccurate and misleading. English translations of the interviews below, plus more articles on this issue, are coming soon. It is unfortunate that KPFA’s Rude Awakening is broadcasting one viewpoint and refusing to present other perspectives, when KPFA’s stated mission is “to serve as a forum for various viewpoints.”

Task Force on the Americas Board of Directors

November 30, 2020

 

References

What’s the Beef with Nicaragua?

https://www.casabenjaminlinder.org/navigatingnicaragua/whats-the-beef-with-nicaragua

Branding Nicaraguan meat as “conflict beef” is the latest attack

https://popularresistance.org/branding-nicaraguan-meat-as-conflict-beef-is-the-latest-political-attack/

Saneamiento Territorial in Nicaragua, and the Prospects for Resolving Indigenous-Mestizo Land Conflicts

https://par.nsf.gov/servlets/purl/10096484

The US Contracts Out its Regime Change Operation in Nicaragua

https://www.coha.org/the-us-contracts-out-its-regime-change-operation-in-nicaragua/

US Meddling in Nicaragua

https://www.counterpunch.org/2018/05/10/is-the-u-s-meddling-in-nicaragua/

 

The following interviews with indigenous leaders were conducted in November 2020.

Interview Eloy Frank Gomez President of the Mayangna Nation and Arisio Genaro Celso Secretary
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wZDufZnQOMs
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DyTpGBP1pd0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FZCRBIQGseY

Interview with Lejan Mora  President Gobierno Territorial Indígena Wangki Twi / Tasba Raya
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eqO9RROMt_4

Interview with Rose Cunningham Kain Alcaldesa of Waspam and  President Gobierno Territorial Indígena Wangki Awala Kupia
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iK_u8znX8E4

Interview with District Judge of Waspam, Dra. Loyda Martínez Rodríguez
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EkaN9PJiIcY