Rebelion.org

[2] Texts by, and translations into Spanish from, authors such as Heinz Dieterich, Noam Chomsky, Marta Harnecker, Eduardo Galeano, José Saramago, Gabriel García Márquez, Julio Anguita, Vicenç Navarro and Ralph Nader[3] have been included in Rebelión.

Rebelión emerged in 1996, developed from Spain by a nonprofit group of journalists who boosted another model of communication not dependent on large media or market conditionings.

[1] The ideological orientation of published contents is based on: (...) to accommodate all the voices that honestly and sincerely try to bring some clarity and truth on behalf of the people and silenced by the mainstream media.

(...) For those who are only the voice of power, money and neoliberalism, there is no place in Rebelion, they already have CNN.According to their promoters, it is an alternative means which publishes news that are not considered important by traditional media.

Furthermore, it tries to give a different news treatment to "showing the interests that economic and political powers among the capitalist world hide in order to preserve their privileges and current status".

It also has geographical sections focusing on Africa, Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, Ecuador, the USA, Spain, Europe, Iraq, Mexico, Palestine, the Near East, and Venezuela.

[7] The following journalists participated in this edition: Ignacio Ramonet (director of Le Monde Diplomatique), Stella Calloni (La Jornada), Enrique Ortega (Resumen Latinoamericano), Antonio Maira (Cádiz Rebelde), Eva Bjorklund (Revista Kuba de Suecia), and the intellectuals Santiago Alba Rico y Carlos Fernández Liria.

Richard Stallman talking about rebelion.org with Wikipedians ( Wikimania 2009 )