The media: a victim of
neo-colonialism
Dr. Bouthaina Shaaban
The World Press Freedom Day was
marked by speeches and reports which maintain the status quo and, on substance,
generally ignore the causes of the real dangers faced by journalists. Journalists have been arrested, imprisoned,
attacked and assassinated. They have
become a constant, albeit undeclared, target in battles, wars and political
conflicts. Despite the blackout imposed
on this harsh reality, and the vague language used as a cover for killing and
persecution, small countries are usually pinpointed when mentioning the
persecution of journalism, while big countries, particularly militarily
dominant ones, are not mentioned.
But one can conclude that the war on
Iraq and the situation in Palestine have pushed up the indicator of deliberate
targeting of journalists in an unprecedented way. China Today published a report which
said that “In a 14 month period, during occupation, more reporters were killed
in Iraq than during the entire Vietnam War and most of them are
independents”. On April 8, 2003,
American intelligence services killed Al-Jazeera journalist Tariq Ayoub who had
just arrived in Iraq from Jordan. On the
same day, American troops shelled the Palestine Hotel which was accommodating
over a hundred journalists. It was known
to all that the hotel was a hub for foreign journalists and reporters. In that incident, Jose Cuso, the cameraman
for the Spanish television and Tautus Prodzuk, a veteran Reuters
cameraman, were killed. It was very
clear that tens of reporters and cameramen were killed in Iraq in an
unprecedented escalation against war correspondents and photographers who
refused to be false witnesses to the American army and to publish only its
stories and the photographs and footage given to them by commanders of American
military units.
In Pakistan, a large number of
journalists are being killed, according to Owais Aslam Ali, Secretary-General
of the Pakistan Press Foundation in a speech he delivered at the “Immunity
Summit: Solidarity against the Killing of Journalists”. Speakers at the summit said that more than
88 journalists have been killed during the last ten years in Iraq.
In occupied Palestine, Israel
continues to assassinate tens of Arab and foreign journalists, particularly
those who went there to document Israeli crimes against the people and children
of Palestine. Probably the most famous
among them was British journalist James Miller, who was making a documentary
about Israel’s crimes against children.
Looking into the names and works of
the journalists killed by the Americans and Israelis in Iraq and Palestine, it
will be found that all of them were seeking the truth and were brave and honest
in their endeavors to pass that truth to readers and viewers all over the
world. The UNESCO report published on
March 10, 2010, under the title “UNESCO raises flag on rising number of
murdered journalists” confirms this fact.
It says that “At least 80 per cent of the 125 murders in 2008-2009 were
due to attacks specifically targeting the victims by those who do not wish
journalists to investigate and reveal information of public interest”. The report adds: “Needless to say this
represents a severe threat to freedom of expression and to our ability to seek
the truth”.
There is no doubt that this serious
threat to the lives of journalists has struck a blow to investigative
journalism which is going through an unprecedented crisis. Foreign correspondents recall how they used
to drive their cars from Jerusalem to different villages and towns in the West
Bank talking to Palestinians and reporting their suffering to the whole world.
That was in the 1980s, while today
reporters are banned from the scenes of events.
Even international supporters of Palestinian rights, who go there to
demonstrate against the racial segregation wall and other crimes are routinely
beaten up, humiliated, arrested and sometimes killed by Israeli troops and
security officers. That was the fate of
the young American woman Rachel Corrie who was deliberately run over by an
Israeli bulldozer.
Despite all this, the UN Secretary
General avoided in his speech about targeting journalists to mention this
deliberate killing of journalists by American and Israeli troops in Iraq and
Palestine. He only talked about
journalists who uncovered cases of violations of the law or corruption cases,
which is important in itself, provided that he does not ignore the wider and
more dangerous case of having security and intelligence forces of governments
like the United States and Israel targeting journalists in Iraq, Palestine,
Pakistan and Afghanistan. This is of
course intended to discourage reporters from going there and avoid the scandals
when the public know of the crimes committed against innocent people in these
countries. There have been numerous
massacres in Afghanistan. In the news,
we hear about killing mujahedeen, only to discover later that the victims were
women and children.
In an age of neo-colonialism where
objectives are achieved by claiming to be spreading democracy, freedom and
human rights, while the reality is that natural resources are ransacked and the
native populations oppressed and displaced, controlling the media machine has
become an instrument in strengthening the hegemony of the colonizers and
covering up their crimes and greed.
Had there been real immunity for
journalists and reporters, the world would not have taken years to discover
that the occupation of Iraq was built on a huge lie; and that the real
objective of this occupation was to rob Iraq of its oil, wealth, civilization
and history and eliminate its important role in its Arab world. The world would have discovered the brutality
and destruction used and the enormity of human suffering inflicted on an
innocent population in order to achieve that objective.
Had there been real freedom of
movement for journalists in occupied Palestine, settlers would not have been
able to kill and terrorize the native population on a daily basis without their
crimes being exposed to the world.
It seems that an effective mechanism
for occupiers to cover their crimes and the suffering they cause to their
victims is to kill the free voices who refuse to be
‘embedded’ with their troops. Those
journalists were true to their vocation and their conscience; and that is why
they paid with their blood and life the price of their integrity.
On the World Press Freedom Day, the
least international organizations, which claim concern for human rights and
freedom of expression, could have done was highlight the seriousness of these
crimes and name those who stand behind them, whoever they are, instead of
taking part in muzzling the truth.