Azai4y Cyprus:. The Living Child MAGAZINE APPEARING AT THREE-WEEK INTERVALS EMER GENT AFRICA: "Our Eyes Must Look Unto Tomorrow" WITH THIS ISSUE of The Mag- azine, The Daily resumes a tra- dition that began in November of 1954: the publication of a regularly appearing Sunday supplement de-- voted to theatre, cinema, literature, music and the graphic arts. The tradition was suspended briefly last spring when the present Daily edi- tors took office.. Although the Magazine, evolved greatly since its inception in 1954, primarily concerns itself with the arts, it occasionally sets aside an entire issue to deal in depth with problems of current interest nor- mally covered in the pages of the newspaper. Thus this Magazine is devoted to the topic of freedom of the press and the questions this freedom poses to the Western world. OCTOBER 11 through 17 is Na- tional Newspaper Week. While to many Americans that week will mean a time to celebrate the liber- ties granted to the press, the writers in this issue have taken it to mean a period for a closer examination of those liberties: How do they serve the peoples of the Free World and' where, in part, do they fail? In the first article (pages -two and three), Prof. Beverley J. Pooley of the University law school writes of press coverage in Emergent Af- rica: A New Ghana. A graduate of the University of Cambridge, Eng- land, Prof. Pooley substantiates his article with his own experiences in, Ghana in 1960-62 when he taught in the law department at the Uni- versity of Ghana. He earned his doctorate in law at the. University and has been a member of its teach- ing staff since 1962. On pages four through six, Wayne H. Nielsen probes press coverage of The Second Indo China War. For- merly a teaching fellow (1960-62)- and an instructor (1962-64) in the philosophy department at the Uni- versity, Mr. Nielsen begins this September as a special lecturer in philosophy at the University of Sa- skatchewan at Saskatoon, Canada. "I have long been interested in applying the analytical techniques of philosophy to practical issues such as international and domestic politics," he explains. "Hence, my interest in Southeast Asia." Finally, (page seven) Konstan- tinos Lardas takes a look at West- ern press reports in Cyprus: The Living Child. Presently a staff mem- ber of the University's English de- partment, Mr. Lardas studied as a Fulbright scholar at the University of Athens, _Greece, in 1962-63. He earned his bachelor's degree at the University of Pittsburgh and his- master's at Columbia University, both in comparative literature. He is presently working toward his doctorate at the University. Stephen Berkowitz, Robert Far-, rell, O. Ranieri di Sorbello, Jeffrey Chase and Steven Haller make con- tributions to Books and Records in Review on page eight. Cover artist Jane Reinsberg has illustrated this issue of The Mag-' azine. A former Daily staff mem- ber, Miss Reinsberg is a senior majoring in painting in the archi- tecture and design college. The photograph on page three was taken by Daily photographer James Keson, a senior majoring in English and mathematics at the University. Following this issue, The Mag- azine will appear in the pages of the Sunday Daily at regular three week intervals. The next issue is scheduled for Sunday, October 11. By BEVERLEY J. POOLEY DURING A TWO-YEAR STAY in Ghana recently, my attention was called with depressing regularity to the inadequacies of the British and American press in re- porting the state of affairs in Ghana in particular and Africa in general. To many Westerners, the shortcomings of the press in general are decisively outweighed by the advantages which they deem to be secured by a free press and which are not otherwise attainable. There are, after all, for those who have developed some sense of discrimination between various mag- azines and newspapers, certain estab- lished methods of acquiring information not readily available in the press for one reason or another. However, it is perhaps not always ap- parent to us that the price we pay for the freedom we grant to the press, while not of great account at home, is sub- stantial in other countries-especially those recently emerging from a colonial rule that did not foster an awareness of Western institutions. The people of these newly emerging nations may, indeed, fail to recognize as "self-evident" the rights and freedoms enjoyed by the peoples of the West. Much legitimate concern is occasionally expressed about our apparent failure in the West to win over the uncommitted peoples of the newly developing coun- tries-if not to adopting our economic and social institutions-at least to an acceptance of our more general ideals-of individual freedom, ordered liberty and so on. When a frenzied, foaming mob in some remote fly-blown republic stones our embassy and hauls down the flag, it is becoming fashionable to suppose that the perpetrators must have been goaded into such excesses by skilled Communist agitators who alone can foment such sinister and wayward passions. IF ONE BELIEVES that all hostility to Western ideas is engendered by Com- munist subversion, then one's responses to individual problems become patterned by certain simplicity. It is possible, how- ever, to conclude that by crediting the Communists with every anti-Western movement and achievement, one is in fact not only presenting the Communists with undeserved kudos (a grave political betise) but one is also completely mis- reading the causes and the goals of most postwar agitation. "Why is it, one might ask, that such a misreading of crucial events has oc- curred? Why is it that our own motives are so seriously misunderstood abroad? (Of course, it may be that unrest is caused by our motives being understood only too clearly-but this is probably too uncharitable a view.) Can all the dis- agreements and conflict which appear to have occurred between the West and Ghana, for example, be ascribed to Com- munist agitation? BEFORE ATTEMPTING to answer these questions, let us first examine some of the popularly-held notions which the two countries have about each other. A fair reading of a eross-section of the American and British press over thelast three or four years would picture the African nation something like this: Ghana is an impoverished country in West Africa, governed dictatorially by, a Marxist, Kwame Nkrumah. The country has virtually severed all its few links with the West: American professors (in- cluding Professor William B. Harvey of the University law school) have been sum- marily deported; trade with the Eastern bloc grows day by day; sinister military links with the East are being established. The firing of the chief justice six months ago demonstrated that the constitution has been overthrown; arbitrary deten- tion of persons whom the government dislikes has turned the country into a nvoife state- 'nd corrunt ministers have salting away huge fortunes in Swiss banks.$ At the same time, I think, a ~casual reading of the Ghanaian press (virtually controlled by Nkrumah's party) would give rise to the following conclusions about the United States: America is a large and immensely wealthy country, peopled mainly by white men who live off the labor of millions of downtrodden Negroes, kept in their place by the use of dogs and cattle-rods (illustrations dem- onstrate the point). Americans do not favor the idea of new nations, like Ghana, taking an active role in world affairs, especially if that role is opposed to the position of the U.S. Therefore, the U.S. uses a secret wing of the government, the Central Intelligence Agency, to re- move ,by force, those governments with which the U.S. cannot get along. (Gua- temala, Viet-Nam, and Cuba are used as illustrations.) Since Ghana is both black and politically opposed to the U.S. on many questions, the Ghanaian press be- lieves it would be reasonable for Ghana to expect the attentions of the CIA. The complete reporting and lack of malice? It is. difficult to escape the conclusion that the errors, half-truths and distor- 'tions it contains are the result of in- competence and neglect alone. Before attempting a tentative conclusion as to what interests might best be served by such misreporting, it is important to point out the areas in which such misreporting takes place. Let us first turn to the charge that Ghana is run by a Marxist dictator.' Nkrumah took over in 1957 from a British colonial government, one of the starkest forms of dictatorship imaginable, since the tangible dictator, the governor, who might be argued with, and with whom one might reason, was himself subject to the unseen power of the colonial office. No political party of- ficially opposing the government's view might be formed; indeed, to do so was treason. UNDER SUCH CIRCUMSTANCES, to expect that a model democracy would emerge is to suppose that persons and societies exposed to our "superior" way of life a comparatively short period of time wil exhibit a standard of political sophistication achieved, in fact, by a very few countries, comprising less than a quarter of the world's population. Such expectations seem even more unreason- able if one 'considers the spectacularly effective demonstration of the breakdown of democracy in the comparatively well- fed and well-educated Europe in the first half of the century. Of those whose sense of decorum in these matters is absolutist, one might in- quire why it is that the Western press focuses attention with particularly sever- ity upon Ghana (and some other African countries) and not -on other lands where the traditional excuses for dictatorship seem less valid. It is, for example, a fact that Nkrumah won three national elec- tions in Ghana prior to British with- drawal. There can be little doubt of-his great popular following at that time, at least. We know nothing, unfortunately, of the size of popular following attracted by General Franco of Spain, or by Dr. Salazar of Portugal, because it has never been put to a meaningful test. TRUE TO Western press reports, Nkru- mah has indeed used the infamous Preventive Detention Act to put behind bars, without trial, those persons whom he supposes to be plotting against him. Without in any way trying to defend this typge.of legislation, it does need to be, pointed out that this procedure in Ghana was first used by the British, who im- prisoned Nkrumah himself under a sim- ilar act. It is significant that at the beginning of the Second World War, the British government in Britain passed legislation empowering British officials to imprison anyone deemed a danger to the security of the state and that the legislation -was upheld by the courts. Similar legislation has been used in virtually all British colonies at one time or another-not necessarily because of despotic leanings, but because of the great difficulty of keeping law and order in a country where the normal institu- tions of government are not nearly so expertly staffed as they are in Western countries. Again, it is curious that three or four hundred political prisoners (If one can call them that) in Ghana have assumed (in the Western press) an izn- portance never achieved by the one hundred thousand political prisoners in Spain. What Price Do We Pay for Freedom of the Press? By KONSTANTINOS LARDAS And the king said, Bring me a sword. And they brought a sword before the "king. And the king said,, Divide the.child in two, and give half to the one, and half to the other. T KINGS 3:24-25 KING SOLOMON once sat in judgment and revealed a truth that saved a child, and rendered it unto its rightful mother. I take these words to show how we, the press, the government, the people of America have failed to heed a right- ful cause, have failed to render justice' unto another child. Whatever agony occurs on Cyprus has roots in the aspirations of a people who for 3500 years have been Greeks, and who, for all these years, have been denied this Greekness. The accusations that I make are that we have suppressed the just hopes of a people who comprise 82 per cent of the population of Cyprus; that we have done so by falsehoods and inuendos and that we seek to protect and to implement alliances rather than to establish truths. No man can deny the Greekness of Cyprus. No man does deny it today. And yet, fourteen years ago, when the Cyp- riots, in the open plebiscite of January 15, 1950, voted overwhelmingly (96 per cent) for union with Greece. Great Brit- ain ignored that will and proclaimed in 1954, the "anti-sedition" laws in order to intimidate the people and arrest the growth of the liberation movement. The British government had proclaimed that Cyprus would "never" be granted the right of self-determination. This decision by Great Britain prompted the decision of theiGreeks to open warfare-to a war of liberation. IMMEDIATELY, our press responded by calling the liberation fighters "mur- derous" and "treacherous" and "terroris- tic" and "gansteristic" rebels. These men who fought heroicly against 40,000 well- armed British troops were reviled by our press. Our press, our government, we- cried, and still cry, for the Hungarian youth who rose against the Russians; and with these same outcries, these same un- comprehending voices, we condemned the Greeks who rose against our English cousins. We had not yet learned; and shall we ever learn, that other cousins, too, exist. Adhering to that course of "never," Britain understood the dangerous poli- cies that she had espoused. She knew that the will of the Greek people must be suppressed, so she established con- centration camps, arresting thousands of citizens whom she sent there without trials. With the command of General Harding, public floggings of youths were instituted--and deaths by hanging, and deaths by flame-throwers were heralded as victories for Britain. And yet, Great Britain understood that this was not enough. To retain Cyprus, to prevent her union with Greece, she knew that other means must be established. to confound the Cypriot people, to becloud the moral issue involved in this war of liberation. What better means, then, were at hand, than to stir up the ethnic groups which comprised the population of Cyprus? This was the key, as it has been the key to England's rule over this earth: to divide the people of Cyprus, and by dividing them, to rule eternally. That Greeks and Turks and Maronites and Armenians had lived together in Cyprus under the Ottoman Empire and under the British Empire for five hun- dred years was not proof enough that they could live together. This must not be. Neither the policies of Britain could permit this truth, neither could our own news media. So, Britain, deviously, in the late fifties, placed over the heads of the majority Greek population a police force comprised entirely of Turks (i.e., -after she had removed all Greeks from these forces). This was the first overt action of Britain that established the Turkish "presence' that we read nbnnt in involving the Turks of the island in a collusive policy. And both were enemies to Greeks. BUT IN THE "motherland" of Turkey, how was _adarker interference to be established? From the "Index to the House of Commons Parliamentary De- bates, Weekly Hansard," No. 496, July 14, 1960, M. P. Callaghan, Labour Party speaker for colonial affairs, shows how Eden enlightened the government of Men- deres: The British -prime minister went out of his way to forment the troubles which he knew existed, and he did it because he wanted reinforcement from the Turks in order to preserve our position in the base. Those of us who were at Stratsbourg saw this tactic being played as long ago as 1954. It was a shabby and discredit- able period, when even Sir Anthony Eden, a man of honour for whom I have a high regard, said, "Let the Turkish newspapers play it up a little more than they have done so far. Tell them to let everybody know where they stand instead of bringing them together." The foreign secretary knows that when representatives of the Turkish and Greek governments were brought to this country in 1955 with a view to discussing the situation in the -Middle East, it was not-with the in- tention of finding a solution, but with the intention of confronting them with each other to see how far apart they were. The whole of the action of the British government over many years are suspect in this field. They have done that of which Britain has always been accused-divide and rule. On September 6 and 7, 1955, during this Tri-Partite London Conference, the Turkish government, under the Menderes dictatorship instigated the riots of Istan- bul and Izmir, wherein the shops and homes of 100,000 Greeks were looted; wherein the cemetaries of the patriar- chate were desecrated, the bones of bishops and of patriarchs dug up and scattered through the streets; wherein were perpetrations of rape, and of murder, and of death by scalping of Greek priests. This was unjustifiable " carnage. There was no reason for these acts in Istanbul and Izmir, free cities and far from the strife of Cyprus. That mobs might per- petrate such actions is conceivable, but that the Turkish government planned and executed these outrages is unfor- givable.' That the attacks were planned and executed by Menderes and Zorlu were proved in public trial by Inonu and Gursel, the men who rule Turkey today. The present government of Turkey tried and hanged this former premier and his foreign secretary, for this and for other crimes against their very nation.. And yet, what were the reactions of our press during the Istanbul-Izmir riots, riots that were planned not only to ter- rorize the Greeks of these Turkish cities, but that were to serve as bargaining tools by England and by Turkey-tools that told the Greeks of Cyprus, " You shall never have ENOSIS, and if you con- tinue this cry, we shall partition you, we shall cut you in two and give half of you to Greece and half of you to Turkey, or failing this, we shall slaughter every Greek within our borders." And these were actions, not idle threats. The world knows what Turkey, the official govern- ment of Turkey is capable of doing-what she has done, not only, in the. dark past, to Kurds and to Armenians and to Greeks, but even yesterday, the 8th and 9th of August, 1964. "The Turkish nation is such a nation that, when its patience is exhausted, it knows how to eliminate its opponents from history, for good."- Mr. Tuncer, a Turkish emissary speaks. AND THE REACTIONS in America to these riots and to these threats? Our Secretary of State Dulles fired off iden- tical telegrams to Greece and to Turkey admonishing both countries to behave. papers, the radios, the T.V. programs have continued their uninformed, their reprehensible reportings--reportings that have emboldened them, out of ignorance, out of an unjustifiable passion, out of an unholy concern for the Turkish minority of Cyprus which is "oppressed" by the Greeks, to that point of degrad- ing themselves by calling Greeks "sav- ages" and "barbarians"-and they have made a mockery of the "free" press and of our own freedom because they have, wittingly or unwittingly, mocked us, the people of America. They have mocked us even to the point where we are led to believe all falsehoods to be truths.. Where have we read in American papers the refutations of the charges of genocide against the Greeks of Cyprus-- charges that are wildly proclaimed by Kuchuck and by Ankara, and which, as quickly, die away, unfounded? (But cap- tions of these lies remain with us as remembrances of truths.) Where have we read in American papers of the Turkish and British plans that forced the Turkish-Cypriot villagers to move into the northern enclaves of the island, before independence was pro- claimed (moves that were prepared first, to threaten partition until independence was granted, and that now, since in- dependence has been granted, not only to continue the threat of partition, but to demand it)? Where have we seen photographs of dead Greeks in American papers? (They too have died; and more than Turks and Britons. Ah, yes. The Greeks are the majority and therefore more should die. But where is there one picture to tell America that they have died?) AH, BUT THIS counting is an evil. And this is not my purpose. Yes, Greeks have killed Turks. And Turks have killed Greeks. And Englishmen have killed Greeks. And Greeks have killed English- men. There is a question of Turkish rights on Cyprus? That question has been an-. swered by Makarios and by his Foreign Minister Kyprianou: "My government is ready to guarantee the human rights of all its citizens irrespective of color, creed or religion." (UN Security Council, June 18, 1964.) There is a question of partition or of union? That question has been answered by Makarios: "We will repulse any attack on Cyprus with all means at our dis- soar once more abo blast them all, who Turk.) II. To compe Turkish leadership wl leave Cyprus; a lea since the beginning o tion, and during, ar conspired to prevent liberation. (But, only other Turk will leave t the chaos and the op: Turkey of today.) I Turkey a tiny Greek tellorizo in exchange with Greece. (But G barter even her time as Turkey gave lush of a debt to England. , And these frustrati who has returned fr ported to our Presid reports, U.S. officia. have reported (New S 1964) that peace in terranean can ony Makarios disbands l (But this is the gu scripted solely to wa threats from Ankara her fleet to invade her "oppressed" chii Greeks who are " Turkish Cypriots are 25,000,000 Turks. W this counting? Where of oppression? Wher sympathies by whic II. Makarios raises t villages. (But this i imposed upon these v leaders-villages anc spired to a partitio III. Makarios permil a part of her garriso this is the garrison denounced; that gar miserable reminder tition.) But bombings and of desperation. For from the English "n ence was attained. W we attained by shac constitution, unique wretchedness. But C ably to a complete, dependence. THlE SHAME for u been that we did this just demand of tragedy will be t12 Cyprus is made free, made free because Asian world,: because She shall have been of, and to the oonste World. Now it behooves u Makarios and Gree had not wisdom to e proclaim a peace; fc in mimicry of Engl condoned and urged we have shouted t shouted liberty; for denied this liberty, people whose father what liberty has alv If we are to be a are to lead men and thing there is thai grasp, something th learn to see. Our e tomorrow, and not the moment-what to be contained; fo swiftly and plumme --or else we lose or I would be ours. Both mothers wi of King Solomon w are, all of us, in t nations, thus, But t- in that one moth truth, and who ma the rightful mother for her child. We ca this severance of C <: three attempts to assassinate President Nkrumah in the past eighteen months can safely be ascribed to this kind of activity. This view of the U.S. is fostered by a group of extreme leftists within the ruling CPP party who have secured control of the press. It omits; it distorts; it is, to put it mildly, uncharitable. It is not presented by a national press whose goal- is to inform the electorate. It is quite' manifest that the press does not and is not intended to play this role in Ghana.- One's sense of shock and profound dis- agreement with this state of affairs (similar to that which exists in many of our military, political and economic al-, lies, e.g. Spain, South Africa and South Korea) should not lead us to a total rejection of all the philosophies of the Ghana government.- Nor should it lead us to judge our own press by less rigorousr standards than we would impose if the comparison were not being made with a country which manifestly and openly sub- jects its press to political considerations. posal with courage and determination ready to sacrifice the last man in defense of our liberty." What Ball proposed to Makarios a few months ago was foolishness-to ac- cept NATO peace-keeping forces on Cyprus. (Makarios demanded the United Nations, for NATO meant partitioning of Cyprus.) AT ACHESON has most recently. proposed to Makarios was even great- er nonsense: I. To accept NATO or Turkish bases on Cyprus-this, after the Turkish slaughter of hundreds of Greek Cypriots burned horribly by American- made jets, by American-made napalm bombs;jets that had flown from a Turk- ish NATO base, jets that have still to draw from the lips of Adlai Stevenson one word, if not of condemnation of this Turkish act, at least one word of regret 'E T ;: YI'] he I i_ "t -1