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Communique: 21 September 2004
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REUTERS ADMITS
APPEASING TERRORISTS
Dear HonestReporting Subscriber,
HonestReporting has repeatedly denounced
media outlets' categorical refusal to call
terrorists 'terrorists' in news reports (see
our
special report on this topic).
As Islamic terror continues to spread
worldwide, one major news outlet
decided
that enough is enough ― it's time to call
terrorism by its name.
CanWest, owners of Canada's largest
newspaper chain, recently implemented a new
editorial policy to use the 'T-word' in
reports on brutal terrorist acts and groups.
So when CanWest's National Post published a
Reuters report on Sept. 14, they exercised
their right to change this Reuters line that
whitewashes Palestinian terror:
... the al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, which
has been involved in a four-year-old
revolt against Israeli occupation in
Gaza and the West Bank.
(Jeffrey Heller, 9/13
'Sharon Faces Netanyahu Challenge')
to this, more accurate line:
... the al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, a
terrorist group that has been involved
in a four-year-old campaign of violence
against Israel.
Reuters
didn't like the adjustment, and took the
unusual step of officially informing CanWest
that if it intended to continue this
practice, CanWest should remove Reuters'
name from the byline. Why?
The New York Times reported
(emphasis
added):
"Our editorial policy is that we don't
use emotive words when labeling
someone," said David A. Schlesinger,
Reuters' global managing editor. "Any
paper can change copy and do whatever
they want. But if a paper wants to
change our copy that way, we would be
more comfortable if they remove the
byline."
Mr. Schlesinger said he was concerned
that changes like those made at CanWest
could lead to "confusion" about what
Reuters is reporting and possibly
endanger
its reporters in volatile
areas or situations.
"My goal is to
protect
our reporters and protect our
editorial integrity," he said.
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Schlesinger
(right) with Reuters'
news exec Stephen Jukes, who
instructed editors not to call
9/11 'terror,' since 'one man's
terrorist is another man's freedom
fighter.' |
[Schlesinger repeated this statement in a
recent
radio interview with CBC, when he
described the 'serious consequences' if
certain 'people in the Mideast' were to
believe Reuters called such men 'terrorists.']
This is a stunning admission ― Reuters' top
international editor openly acknowledges
that one of the main reasons his agency
refuses to call terrorists 'terrorists' has
nothing to do with editorial pursuit of
objectivity, but rather is a response to
intimidation
from thugs and their supporters.
In every other news arena, western
journalists pride themselves on bravely
'telling it as is,' regardless of their
subjects' (potentially hostile) reactions.
So why do editors at Reuters ― and,
presumably, other news outlets ― bend over
backwards to appease Islamic terrorists,
using 'safe' language that deliberately
minimizes their inhuman acts?
Scott Anderson, editor-in-chief of CanWest
Publications, said that Reuters' policy
'undermine[s] journalistic principles,' and
raised the key question:
'If you're
couching language to protect people, are you
telling the truth?'
An editorial in the
Ottawa Citizen, one of CanWest's
newspapers, spells out the issue in black
and white:
Terrorism is a technical term. It
describes a modus operandi, a tactic. We
side with security professionals who
define terrorism as the deliberate
targeting of civilians in pursuit of a
political goal. Those who bombed the
nightclub in Bali were terrorists.
Suicide bombers who strap explosives to
their bodies and blow up people eating
in a pizza parlour are terrorists. The
men and women who took a school full of
hostages in Beslan, Russia, and shot
some of the children in the back as they
tried to flee to safety were terrorists.
We as journalists do not violate our
impartiality by describing them as such.
Ironically, it is supposedly neutral
terms like 'militant' that betray a
bias, insofar as they have a sanitizing
effect. Activists for various political
causes can be 'militant,' but they don't
take children hostage.
* * *
The CanWest/Reuters affair is remarkably
similar to
CNN's Iraqi cover-up from last year,
when CNN's top news executive admitted that
CNN's knowledge of murder, torture, and
planned assassinations in Saddam's Iraq was
suppressed in order to maintain CNN's
Baghdad bureau. We asked back then:
Now that this senior CNN executive has
come clean, it leaves us wondering: In
what other regions ruled by terrorist
dictators do the media toe the party
line so as to remain in good stead?
We now have our answer in the Palestinian
region. Reuters admits to regulating its
language to appease the terrorists ― and
that's an
open
admission of pro-Palestinian bias.
ACTION ITEMS:
(1)
Send comments to Reuters:
editor@reuters.com
(2)
If your local paper uses Reuters wire
stories for coverage of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, bring Reuters'
admission of non-objectivity to the
attention of your local editor.
(3)
Write a short letter to your local
newspaper, citing Reuters' declaration that
the goal of their soft language is to
protect reporters, and recognizing the
implication: Reuters is not providing
unadulterated, independent coverage of
stories like the Israeli-Arab conflict.
Thank you for your ongoing involvement in
the battle against media bias.
HonestReporting |