Atlantica XXII (bi-monthly magazine)
Posted: Mon Apr 06, 2009 2:43 am
Atlantica XXII
The first issue of Atlantica XXII (March 2009) is on sale at kiosks in Asturias. The front cover features a euro coin tacked onto a faceless corporate suit and the lead article is ‘Los duenos de Asturias’ (The owners of Asturias). The publication’s website is www.atlanticaxxii.com. I’m not sure how much content will be posted online.
The featured articles on the cover of Atlantica XXII include ‘El franquismo pervive’ (‘The Franco legacy lives on’, by Jose L. Garcia Rua), ‘Laboral, vanguardia o papanatismo’ (‘The Laboral Arts Center: avant-garde or idiocy’) and ‘El Asalto al Banco de Espana en el 34’ (‘The takeover of the Bank of Spain in 1934’).
The idea of the magazine is to rev up a critical mass of independent public opinion in Asturias. Such is the anesthetic effect of media control by the PSOE/FSA (the ruling Socialist party in Asturias and inheritor of Franco’s dictatorship) that few, if any, dissenting voices are heard. Key issues include corruption scandals in the construction sector, which have proven the downfall of the Spanish economy.
The recent case of Ovidio Blanco in Xixon (Gijon, in Spanish) is particularly telling. A former urban planner for the city with the PSOE, Blanco bought a plot of land in Cabuenes for 20,000 euros in 1994. Still employed by the city as head urban planner, he sold the piece of land, bought it again and resold once more for 609,900 euros, grossing 589,900 euros.
Madrid’s daily ‘El Mundo’ (center right) had to break the story in Asturias because no local media (other than bloggers) were willing to take on such an obvious case of influence peddling involving a public official. A similar case has surfaced with IDEPA, the investment promotion agency of Asturias (www.idepa.es). The director, Victor Gonzalez Marroquin, says his salary of 107,000 euros/year ($144,858) is ‘public, but not publishable’. News to me, but it hasn’t prevented Marroquin from issuing veiled threats to journalists.
What I like most about Atlantica XXII is its unapologetic accountability. The magazine is headed by Xuan Candano, an investigative reporter who works at the branch of TVE (Spain’s public television) in Asturias. On page 2 of the magazine, there is a picture of the 16 founding members who have jumpstarted the project with seed money of 46,000 euros. The members’ list includes firefighters, journalists, teachers, professors, notaries, editors, entrepreneurs, lawyers and freelancers. The subscription fee is 30 euros per year and you will be showing support for one of the scarce independent media in Asturias.
Here’s an excerpt of Xuan Candano’s op-ed on page 1:
“We think Asturias needs a media outlet like Atlantica XXII to strengthen public opinion, which has been severely weakened and unable to participate in public debates, most of which are poor because they are conditioned by institutional forces and official outlets. The global media seems to have given up its role as a legitimate check for those in power. Atlantica XXII was created to fill that vacuum…”
The first issue of Atlantica XXII (March 2009) is on sale at kiosks in Asturias. The front cover features a euro coin tacked onto a faceless corporate suit and the lead article is ‘Los duenos de Asturias’ (The owners of Asturias). The publication’s website is www.atlanticaxxii.com. I’m not sure how much content will be posted online.
The featured articles on the cover of Atlantica XXII include ‘El franquismo pervive’ (‘The Franco legacy lives on’, by Jose L. Garcia Rua), ‘Laboral, vanguardia o papanatismo’ (‘The Laboral Arts Center: avant-garde or idiocy’) and ‘El Asalto al Banco de Espana en el 34’ (‘The takeover of the Bank of Spain in 1934’).
The idea of the magazine is to rev up a critical mass of independent public opinion in Asturias. Such is the anesthetic effect of media control by the PSOE/FSA (the ruling Socialist party in Asturias and inheritor of Franco’s dictatorship) that few, if any, dissenting voices are heard. Key issues include corruption scandals in the construction sector, which have proven the downfall of the Spanish economy.
The recent case of Ovidio Blanco in Xixon (Gijon, in Spanish) is particularly telling. A former urban planner for the city with the PSOE, Blanco bought a plot of land in Cabuenes for 20,000 euros in 1994. Still employed by the city as head urban planner, he sold the piece of land, bought it again and resold once more for 609,900 euros, grossing 589,900 euros.
Madrid’s daily ‘El Mundo’ (center right) had to break the story in Asturias because no local media (other than bloggers) were willing to take on such an obvious case of influence peddling involving a public official. A similar case has surfaced with IDEPA, the investment promotion agency of Asturias (www.idepa.es). The director, Victor Gonzalez Marroquin, says his salary of 107,000 euros/year ($144,858) is ‘public, but not publishable’. News to me, but it hasn’t prevented Marroquin from issuing veiled threats to journalists.
What I like most about Atlantica XXII is its unapologetic accountability. The magazine is headed by Xuan Candano, an investigative reporter who works at the branch of TVE (Spain’s public television) in Asturias. On page 2 of the magazine, there is a picture of the 16 founding members who have jumpstarted the project with seed money of 46,000 euros. The members’ list includes firefighters, journalists, teachers, professors, notaries, editors, entrepreneurs, lawyers and freelancers. The subscription fee is 30 euros per year and you will be showing support for one of the scarce independent media in Asturias.
Here’s an excerpt of Xuan Candano’s op-ed on page 1:
“We think Asturias needs a media outlet like Atlantica XXII to strengthen public opinion, which has been severely weakened and unable to participate in public debates, most of which are poor because they are conditioned by institutional forces and official outlets. The global media seems to have given up its role as a legitimate check for those in power. Atlantica XXII was created to fill that vacuum…”