The Influence of Palestinian Organizations on Foreign News Reporting (JCPA-JERUSALEM CENTER FOR PUBLIC AFFAIRS) Dan Diker Vol. 2, No. 23 JERUSALEM ISSUE BRIEF 03/27/03)
Source: http://www.jcpa.org/brief/brief2-23.htm
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"Television loves emotions and cares less about facts. The
Palestinians don´t care about losing people, and the Israelis can´t
fight that," said one senior international news organization
representative.
"Arafat and his multi-layered security apparatus have muzzled
local press critics via arbitrary arrests, threats, physical abuse,
and the closure of media outlets," frightening most Palestinian
journalists into self-censorship, according to the Independent
Committee for Protection of Journalists.
In Arabic, the word for "news media" (i´laam) is the same word
used for "public relations."
Foreign news agencies have become dependent on Palestinian
cameramen, frequently residents of the West Bank, since Israeli
cameramen are prohibited by the IDF from working in the Palestinian
areas. The result is TV news pictures that focus daily on Palestinian
victims.
Since the outbreak of Palestinian violence in September 2000,
Palestinian leaders have succeeded in using the international news
media to mobilize world opinion in favor of the Palestinian
narrative, depicting the Palestinian "David" defending his homeland
against the Israeli "Goliath." Televised images of Palestinian
suffering portray a human drama that wins the news media war. As a
senior source associated with an international news organization said
recently, "Television loves emotions and cares less about facts. The
Palestinians don´t care about losing people, and the Israelis can´t
fight that."1
Playing by Palestinian Authority Rules
Most foreign correspondents, and particularly local Palestinian
stringers who report from the West Bank and Gaza for Jerusalem-based
foreign news bureaus, operate under an unspoken but firm set of
rules. They avoid reporting stories involving widespread human rights
abuses, high-level corruption and financial mismanagement, and
violence between Palestinian groups that could prove embarrassing to
Arafat and senior Palestinian officials.2
According to a 2001 report by the Independent Committee for
Protection of Journalists, "In the nearly seven years since the
Palestinian National Authority assumed control over parts of the West
Bank and Gaza, Chairman Yasser Arafat and his multi-layered security
apparatus have muzzled local press critics via arbitrary arrests,
threats, physical abuse, and the closure of media outlets. Over the
years the Arafat regime has managed to frighten most Palestinian
journalists into self-censorship."3
The Palestinian Authority does not maintain an official press center
similar to Israel´s Government Press Office. However, the Ramallah-
based Palestine Media Center (PMC) is described as "an independent
official institution established and directed by Yasser Abed Rabbo,
Minister of Culture and Information of the Palestinian National
Authority."4 The PMC is heavily funded by the European Union; it may
not be a coincidence, therefore, that European news organizations
have largely avoided reporting stories that are critical of the
Palestinian Authority.5
According to an Arab-Israeli journalist who assists Jerusalem-based
foreign media outlets, Abed Rabbo views media relations as an
extension of the Palestinian cause.6 The PA information minister made
this idea clear to an official Foreign Press Association (FPA)
delegation that met with him in September 2001 to protest Palestinian
Authority threats against foreign and Palestinian free-lance
photographers who took pictures of Palestinian street celebrations
following the September 11th attacks on the U.S. Abed Rabbo
reportedly told the senior FPA representatives in no uncertain
terms, "Palestinian national interests would come before freedom of
the press."7
A former Arab and Palestinian affairs reporter for Israel Television
noted that Palestinians have not yet developed an appreciation for a
free news media. In Arabic, the word for "news media" (i´laam) is the
same word that is frequently used for "public relations."8
Palestinian "Fixers": The Short Route to Palestinian Leaders
Most foreign journalists are not fluent in either Arabic or Hebrew,
rendering them dependent on a network of local Palestinian "fixers,"
mostly young, educated Palestinians who speak Arabic, Hebrew, and
English. Palestinian fixers, who until recently have been fully
accredited by Israel´s Government Press Office, know their way around
Israel, the West Bank and Gaza, arrange interviews with Palestinian
officials, and introduce journalists to their own circle of local
acquaintances. As a rule, working with a good fixer translates into
getting interviews with top Palestinian leaders and moving safely
around the territories. An Arabic-speaking Israeli journalist who
avoids using fixers noted that most fixers trumpet the PLO narrative
and terminology of the conflict, which frequently collides with
established historical facts and international law. Moreover,
Palestinian security forces watch carefully what is said by local
residents to both foreign and local journalists.9
According to senior foreign news sources based in Jerusalem, the vast
majority of Palestinian fixers - often close friends of Palestinian
employees of Jerusalem-based foreign news agencies - are
ideologically motivated by the Palestinian cause, and actively
encourage journalists to report exclusively on the "evils" of the
Israeli occupation, rather than on the lack of democratic freedoms or
human rights abuses in the West Bank and Gaza.10
Arafat´s "Management" of Foreign Press Interviews
Numerous foreign reporters have learned that interviews with the PA
chairman are not open invitations to ask tough questions. On March
29, 2002, Arafat hung up on CNN´s Christianne Amanpour during a
telephone interview from his besieged Mukata compound after Amanpour
asked the PA leader repeatedly whether "he was able to rein in the
violence."11
In another instance, in 1999, a reporter from the German newspaper
Der Spiegel asked Arafat about widespread reports of corruption in
the Palestinian Authority. Upon hearing the question, Arafat
reportedly accused the reporter of being a member of the Israeli
security services and promptly had him removed. The German reporter´s
fixer, a former Palestinian diplomat who had been based in Germany,
convinced his foreign client to write Arafat a letter of apology, but
Arafat refused to allow the reporter to return.12
On January 6, 2003, Seif al-Din Shahin, a senior Gaza correspondent
for Qatar´s Al Jazeera News Agency, was arrested by Arafat´s
Palestinian General Intelligence on charges of "inflicting damage to
the interests and reputation of the Palestinian people and their
struggle," for reporting that the Al Aksa Brigades, part of the PLO´s
military wing, had claimed responsibility for the double suicide
bombing in Tel Aviv the night before.13
Reliance on Palestinian Cameramen
Palestinian camera operators, frequently residents of the West Bank,
today film the vast majority of foreign TV news coverage in the
territories.14 Foreign news agencies have become dependent on
Palestinians, since Israeli camera people are prohibited by the IDF
from working in the Palestinian areas. Palestinian camera operators
are also far less expensive than their Israeli or foreign news
colleagues.
The result is that TV news pictures, broadcast internationally from
the territories, focus daily on Palestinian dead and wounded, massive
demonstrations and funerals, close-ups of local hospital and morgue
victims, homes of mourning Palestinian families, and destroyed
Palestinian buildings and fields. Missing is a measure of balance
that might show images of the Palestinian-initiated violence,
including shootings, bombings, and rocket attacks on Israeli troops
and civilians, that prompt Israeli military responses.
Perhaps the best example of the pitfalls of reliance on Palestinian
cameramen was the filming of the death of young Muhammad al-Dura by
Palestinian cameraman Talal Abu Rahama working for France 2
television. While al-Dura, apparently killed in the crossfire between
Israeli troops and Palestinian police, became a symbol of the
intifada and was used as a blood libel against Israel, the
photographer later denied claiming that the IDF killed the boy.15
Following several formal investigations, the raw footage of the
shooting revealed that Palestinian photographers were part of the
event and submitted edited footage to foreign networks. Another
German inquiry went even further by concluding that Palestinians
staged the killing with the cooperation of some foreign journalists
and the United Nations.16
Palestinian Intimidation of Foreign News Reporters
The lynching of two Israeli reservists inside a Palestinian police
station in October 2000 would change the rules of Western news
reporting on Palestinian violence. Nasser Atta, a Palestinian
producer with ABC, recalled on Ted Koppel´s "Nightline" how his
cameraman was beaten and his crew prevented from filming the grisly
lynchings.17
According to first-hand reports, Palestinian security forces also
surrounded a Polish TV crew who were beaten and relieved of their
tapes.18 A foreign correspondent noted that in "post-Ramallah where
all good will was lost, he would be a lot more sensitive about going
places in the territories."19 A day after the Ramallah lynchings, an
Italian journalist, who had suffered a separate beating by a rioting
Arab mob in Jaffa, penned a letter in English to Palestinian
officials promising never to violate journalistic ethics by
transmitting film to an embassy or government.20
Following the September 11, 2001, terror attacks on the United
States, an AP photographer´s life was threatened by Palestinian
officials for taking photographs of widespread Palestinian street
celebrations. Arafat´s Cabinet Secretary, Ahmed Abdel Rahman,
reportedly said, "The Palestinian Authority cannot guarantee the life
of the cameraman if the footage was broadcast."21 Despite a strongly-
worded protest by the Foreign Press Association to the Palestinian
Authority, some foreign journalists made peace with the fact that
intimidation is a price of reporting the conflict.22
Palestinian Hospitality Versus Uncooperative Israeli Officials
Palestinian leaders have become well respected among the foreign
press corps for welcoming foreign journalists as honored guests
during meetings and interviews. Palestinian leaders also go to great
lengths to make themselves available to correspondents even at
inconvenient times. For example, PA official Saeb Erekat sent his
personal chauffeured limousine to pick up a Danish reporter and film
crew at an IDF checkpoint for an interview.23
In contrast, some leading foreign journalists have long complained
about a general lack of cooperation by Israeli government officials
towards the foreign press.24 The Prime Minister´s Office and IDF
officials have been known to take several hours or more before
issuing responses to breaking news in the territories, due in part to
requirements of the military censor. Israeli authorities are also
often reluctant to provide informative material to foreign news
correspondents, even following terror attacks.25
Foreign Media Coordination with the PA
Danny Seaman, Director of Israel´s Government Press Office, has
charged that Palestinian employees of several major international
news agencies, including the Associated Press and Reuters, regularly
coordinate their news coverage with Palestinian officials. According
to the GPO, Marwan Barghouti, leader of Fatah in the West Bank and
now imprisoned in Israel, issued early warnings to the foreign
networks about impending Palestinian shooting attacks on Gilo, so
that the film crews could capture Israeli return fire on neighboring
Beit Jalla.26 Although Seaman´s charges were rejected by Dan Perry,
chairman of the Foreign Press Association, Seaman has refused to
renew press credentials for many Palestinian journalists and
producers. Avigdor Yitzhaki, director general of the Prime Minister´s
Office, and Seaman´s boss, commented: "Do you think that everywhere
else, anyone can receive press credentials? I haven´t seen any Iraqi
journalists covering the President of the United States."27
(JCPA.ORG 03/27/03)
1. Interview with a senior international network news official,
December 8, 2002.
2. Bassem Eid, Palestinian human rights activist, November 17, 2002.
Palestinian opposition to discussing intra-Palestinian strife with
the foreign press was also reported by a bureau chief of a major
American daily newspaper at a meeting in Jerusalem on November 26,
2002.
3. Judy Balint, "Palestinian Harassment of Journalists,"
Worldnetdaily.com and Emunah magazine, February 25, 2001,
http://www.jerusalemdiaries.com/doc/20. Frequent instances of self-
censorship by Palestinian journalists were also confirmed in a
meeting with a deputy bureau chief of a leading Jerusalem-based news
agency, November 17, 2002.
4. From the PMC website, http://www.palestine-pmc.com/about.asp.
5. Bassem Eid, Palestinian human rights activist, November 17,
2002.
6. According to a prominent "fixer" from eastern Jerusalem, who also
reports on Arab affairs for a major Israeli newspaper, November 29,
2002.
7. Interview with a deputy bureau chief of a leading Jerusalem-based
international news agency, November 17, 2002.
8. Moshe Cohen, former Arab affairs reporter, Israel Channel One
News, November 14, 2002.
9. Moshe Cohen, November 17, 2002.
10. According to a well-known Palestinian "fixer" who works with
leading European TV networks, November 29, 2002. Palestinian human
rights activist Bassem Eid also confirmed this point on November 17,
2002.
11. http://www.cnn.com/2002/WORLD/meast/03/29/arafat.cnna/.
12. Bassem Eid, November 17, 2002. For other instances of Palestinian
intimidation of the press, see Freedom House 2000 report,
http://www.freedomhouse.org/pfs2000/reports.html#ispa, and the 2000
Amnesty International Annual Report,
http://web.amnesty.org/web/ar2001.nsf/webmenafr?
OpenView, "Palestinian Authority: Silencing Dissent" (AI Index: MDE
21/016/2000).
13. See Honest Reporting.com,
http://honestreporting.com/articles/critiques/Tel_Aviv_Fallout.asp.
14. According to a senior source at a Jerusalem-based international
news organization, November 17, 2002.
15. "Who Killed Muhammad Al Dura? Blood Libel - Model 2000,"
Jerusalem Viewpoints, No. 482, July 15, 2002, Jerusalem Center for
Public Affairs.
16. Ibid.
17. Judy Balint, "Palestinian Harassment of Journalists,"
Worldnetdaily.com, February 25, 2001.
18. Ibid.
19. Ibid.
20. Ibid.
21. "AP protests threats to freelance cameraman who filmed
Palestinian rally," September 12, 2001,
http://arabterrorism.tripod.com/terrorism3.html.
22. Judy Balint, "Palestinian Harassment of Journalists."
23. According to Moshe Maoz, an Israeli free-lance cameraman who
works with Danish Television, December 8, 2002.
24. Jay Bushinsky, former chairman, Foreign Press Association, in
remarks made at the Ariel Media Conference, March 3, 2002.
25. Working Paper, "Israel in the New International Environment: The
Media and Legal Arenas; The Balance of Israel´s National Security,"
Herzliya Conference, December 2002.
26."Why Israel´s Image Suffers," interview with Government Press
Office Director Danny Seaman, Kol Hair, October 13, 2002.
27. Aviva Lori, "The Seaman Code," Ha´aretz, December 27, 2002.
Dan Diker is a Knesset and economic affairs reporter for Israel
Broadcasting Authority´s English News. He is also media affairs
consultant at the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs/Institute for
Contemporary Affairs, founded jointly with the Wechsler Family
Foundation.
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