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Under US control, press freedom falls short
in Iraq
By Robert Fisk
Nov. 23 Freedom of the press is beginning to smell a little rotten
in the new Iraq. A couple of weeks ago, the Arabic Al-Jazeera television
channel received a phone call from one of US Proconsul Paul Bremers
flunkies at the presidential palace compound. The station had to answer
a series of questions in 24 hours, its reporters were told.
They insisted that if we didnt go to them, theyd come
for us, one of Al-Jazeeras reporters told The Independent.
And come they did -- to drive the stations employees to the palace,
where they were handed a sheet of paper asking if they had been given
advance notice of terrorist attacks or had paid terrorists
for information.
Al-Jazeera -- along with its rival channel, Al-Arabiya -- had already
been denounced by the US-appointed Governing Council, currently led by
the convicted fraudster Ahmed Chalabi, and punished for allegedly provocative
programs by being banned from the councils press conferences for
two weeks.
Then the same council -- obviously on Bremers instructions -- listed
a series of dos and donts for all
the media, ranging from a prohibition on inciting violence all the way
to a ban on reporting on the rebirth of the Baath Party or speeches by
Saddam. As columnist Hassan Fattah remarked about the councils punishment
of the two Arab channels, the council and the interim council will
be silent for two weeks, throughout much of the Arab world, including
Iraq itself. The resistance and the terrorists, meanwhile, will still
be able to say what they want. What a perfect opportunity to pour their
footage onto the airwaves and capture the hearts and minds of Iraqis desperate
for stability and some leadership.
Things are no better in the American-run television and radio stations
in Baghdad. The 357 journalists working from the Bremer palace grounds
have twice gone on strike for more pay and have complained of censorship.
According to one of the reporters, they were told by John Sandrock
head of the private American company SAIC, which runs the television station
that either you accept what we offer or you resign; there
are plenty of candidates for your jobs.
Needless to say, the television news is a miserable affair
that often fails to make any mention of the growing violence and anti-American
attacks in Iraq that every foreign journalist and most Iraqi newspapers
report.
When a bomb blew up in part of a mosque in Fallujah last month, for example
killing at least three men local residents claimed the building
had been hit by a rocket from an American jet. The Americans denied this.
But no mention of the incident was made on the American-controlled media
in Baghdad. Asked for an explanation, newsreader Fadl Hatta Al-Timini
replied: I dont know the answer to that -- Im here to
read the news thats brought to me from the Convention Palace [the
American headquarters that also houses the stations offices], thats
all.
As Patrice Claude of Le Monde noted in his paper, all the American-run
media refer to the authorities as the forces of liberation,
even though the foreign press including the New York Times
refer to them as occupation forces. The United States has
supposedly already spent just over 21 million pounds sterling on Iraqs
new audiovisual output, but the Iraqi staff say theyve not seen
the money. When Le Mondes man in Baghdad asked Sandrock for an explanation,
he declined to respond.
On the surface, of course, Bremers publicity men can boast of a
thriving new free press at least 106 new newspapers in Baghdad
alone, many of them sponsored by political parties or by men who want
to become politicians. Some have called for a jihad against the Americans
and have been visited by American officers asking why. Others have
carried blatantly untruthful stories about the occupation army, claiming
that US soldiers have been involved in distributing pornographic pictures
to schoolgirls or taking Iraqi women to the bedrooms of the Palestine
Hotel. One problem is that many journalists for the Iraqi papers are either
converts from the old regime or new writers who have no journalistic training
in fairness or fact checking.
The most professionally produced paper and the stress must be on
the word produced is Az-Zaman, which, roughly translated,
means The Age, and is run by Saad Al-Bazaz, the former Iraqi diplomat
who fell out with Saddam and published his paper from London through the
long last years of Baathist rule. Bazaz was himself the former editor
of Saddams Al-Jumhouriya newspaper, and one of his former colleagues
on the old Baathist rag, Nada Shawqat, is now the editorial supervisor
for Az-Zaman in Baghdad. We have a circulation of 50,000 in Baghdad,
another 15,000 in Basra, each edition carrying 12 pages of foreign and
Arab news and eight of local news, she says. Its good
to feel like a real journalist at last.
But all news decisions are made in Az-Zamans London offices, and
the paper never refers to the occupation, only to the coalition,
Americas own favored expression for the armies of the United States
and its allies in Iraq. Bazaz still lives in London, where Az-Zaman was
printed for years in exile. Two other papers the Iraqi National
Congress Al-Moutamar and the Kurdish Al-Ittihad have also
come out of foreign exile to print in Baghdad.
Shawqat stayed at her post at the Saddamite Al Jumouriyah until the very
last day of the war, Apr. 9, when its offices were looted and burned and
when its archives which included the papers own reports of
the 1983 meeting between Donald Rumsfeld and Saddam were destroyed.
Shawqat said that under Saddam, she had some freedom to write until
his two sons, Udai and Qusai, took an interest in the press. Then
we started getting instructions every day from the minister of information,
telling us what to write and what not to write - it just got worse and
worse over the last 13 years.
No one suggests that journalism under the Americans bears any relation
to those days. But Iraqi writers feel that the Bremer code of conduct
forbidding intemperate (sic) speech that could incite violence
is an example of selective democracy, similar in spirit
if not in effect to the censorship under Saddam.
According to journalist Khadhim Achrash, the decision doesnt
fit with the US announcement that they came here to liberate Iraq and
set up a democratic system.
Many of the new papers carry a menu of gossip and entertainment and stories
of the old regime. One of the first, terrible reports of Saddams
atrocities told of his treatment of soldiers accused of cowardice in the
1980-88 Iran-Iraq war. Two chilling photographs taken by Saddams
own military intelligence officers showed a firing party executing
a line of soldiers and an officer giving the coup de grace to a still-living
man as he lay on the ground.
Many Iraqi journalists believe the semi-legal press syndicate
taking shape in Baghdad is still Baathist at root although others say
it could be used to enact a new press law that would take censorship out
of Bremers hands. Jalal Al-Mashta, the editor of An-Nahda, blames
much of the problem on the speed of transition.
The long-muzzled Iraqi press was nonprofessional and tightly controlled,
then suddenly it became free, he said.
For now, at least.
Source: Independent (UK)
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