The BlogTick Off All the Right People: Watch NBC's 'The Wanted' Tonight6:50 PM, Jul 27, 2009
• By MARY KATHARINE HAM
How often is it that one hour of TV viewing can annoy terrorists, the New York Times, and Human Rights Watch? Take advantage of this infrequent confluence by watching "The Wanted" on NBC tonight at 9/8 c.
Tonight, the show goes after Mamoun Darkazanli. From the synopsis of tonight's episode:
The Left is predictably squeamish about the projection of American moral authority via flashy extra-governmental investigations, and the unfairness and psychic pain such uncouth behavior might cause murderous terrorists and the Euro-wimpy bureaucracies that harbor them. They're not nearly as concerned about terrorists and accused perpetrators human rights violations living freely in Western countries with impunity. Case in point: Later in the season, "The Wanted" tracks down a Goucher College professor who is also an indicted war criminal. Leopold Munyakazi, whose Interpol notice can be found here, taught freshman French and was also accused of participating in Rwanda's genocide. Goucher's president claims he only became aware of the professor's legal problems after he was confronted by "The Wanted," and Munyakazi denies involvement in the genocide, claiming he helped Tutsis escape from Hutu killers. The Rwandan government has asked to have Munyakazi returned. The Department of Homeland Security has arrested him, and is in the process of having him deported while building their own genocide case against him. Some in the media have alleged that the involvement of "The Wanted" in this case is an example of how it can endanger in-progress federal cases against such accused criminals, which is among the more reasonable worries about the show. On the other hand, the New York Times, Goucher's president, and Human Rights Watch have all combined for copious hand-wringing about what this jump-starting of the justice system might mean for Munyakazi. They're not nearly as concerned about a suspected war criminal was teaching students at an American university, which had apparently not done even the most cursory of checks into his background. The Office of the Prosecutor General in Rwanda has dinged Human Rights Watch's statements on Munyakazi's case as "unfounded because they have never reviewed this evidence nor provided alternative information in this regard." The lack of perspective is about par for the course for Human Rights Watch, which has just recently been raising money from the human-rights-impaired Saudis on the strength of its talent for bashing Israel. |
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