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Freedom Fight Against 'Freedom Champions'
Inter Press Service
by Dahr Jamail
DOHA, Apr 2 (IPS) - The al-Jazeera television network could be emerging as a freedom champion against U.S. pressures on the channel, leading media figures say.
"I support al-Jazeera because al-Jazeera has done more to propagate democracy in the Middle East region than anybody else, certainly more than the American government has done," media specialist Hugh Miles told IPS. "It's strange to me that people refer to al-Jazeera as a 'terrorist network' because that couldn't be further from the truth."
Miles spoke to IPS at the third annual al-Jazeera forum at Doha in Qatar Mar. 31 to Apr. 2. The forum highlighted the successful recent expansion of the network while also addressing difficulties that reporters face in the Middle East hot spots.
Miles, author of 'Al Jazeera: How Arab TV News Challenged the
World' and an award- winning freelance journalist said former U.S.
defence secretary Donald Rumsfeld had got it wrong on al-Jazeera.
"Al-Jazeera
has been called a 'terrorist network' or 'the voice of (Osama) bin
Laden', but this just demonstrates deep ignorance of its history and
the channel," Miles said.
The 10-year-old al-Jazeera network
weathered a U.S. military attack on its Baghdad office during the
U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in April 2003. It faced accusations from
Rumsfeld that it promoted terrorism by airing beheadings and other
attacks.
Al-Jazeera editors say that the channel has never aired a beheading, nor does it support terrorism.
Other
leading voices at the forum spoke in support of the channel, that has
been under frequent attack of all kinds. The forum, titled 'Media and
the Middle East: Going Beyond the Headlines' brought journalists,
international media leaders and scholars from around the world to
discuss critical issues facing the media, with a focus on in-depth
journalism.
The conference followed the launching of al-Jazeera
English, a 24-hour English-language news channel that went on air in
November 2006 with more than 80 million households viewing it worldwide
-- an unprecedented launch in the broadcast industry.
"There has
been a four, five, six-year campaign against al-Jazeera," said Aidan
White, general secretary of the International Federation of Journalists
at a panel discussion. "This is a prejudice we cannot ignore."
Abdul
Bari Atwan, editor-in-chief of the London-based Arabic newspaper
al-Quds al- Arabi told IPS that "journalists should unite and raise our
voices to say no to this kind of brutal treatment by the leader of the
free world, by people who are representing freedom. We should stand
united against the new wave of embedded journalism because this is
censorship.
"Freedom of expression is said to be a part of
Western values," Atwan added. "The American administration is
destroying Western values by shooting journalists, by killing the
messenger."
"The largest perpetrators of murdering journalists
are governments," Frank Smyth, Washington representative of the
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) said at the forum.
Many
other journalists are detained without fair trial. Al-Jazeera cameraman
Sami al-Hajj, a Sudanese national, was detained by the U.S. military in
Afghanistan in December 2001. He has yet to be charged, and continues
to be held as "enemy combatant" at Guantanamo Bay.
On Aug. 7,
2004, the U.S.-backed Iraqi interim government led by former CIA asset
Iyad Allawi shut down the Iraq office of al-Jazeera, claiming that it
was presenting a negative image of Iraq, and charging the network with
"fueling anti-coalition hostilities."
Much of the difficulties governments have had with al-Jazeera have arisen because it gets stories other channels do not have.
That
makes it similar to the Inter Press Service (IPS) news agency, said IPS
director-general Mario Lubetkin. Al-Jazeera has much in common with IPS
because the Arab network "goes for the news behind the news," and
"because they cover the south," he said.
Lubetkin added that "we are working with them, they pick up a lot of stories from us in Arabic."
The
forum addressed several issues such as 'parachute jurnalism',
'journalism of depth' and the new media. But the dominant theme
remained attacks on journalists in an increasingly difficult global
environment.
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(c)2007 Dahr Jamail.
[Republished at PFP with author permission]
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