Al Jazeera has pretty nicely
completed it long march up the media mountain of creditability and
respectability. No single supplier is
ever able to avoid some level of interference somewhere, but all can aspire to
a high standard and get it right most of the time. This is true everywhere.
In Al Jazeera’s case, they are
naturally beholden to kowtow to the Saudis as described herein but generally
they get away with an effective free press model just about anywhere else. Quite obviously reporters report and
participate in events and this has given them a trusted voice in the Middle East .
We get upset listening to some fundamentalist
whack bar, but then we get upset listening to our own whack bars. We can respect the right to have these guys
heard and surely that can not be a bad thing.
Listeners will not be persuaded unless they are already persuaded and instead
it hardens resistance to this type of folly.
A free press operates an ongoing
debate that slowly erodes irrational positions.
Today, social media has made press censorship nearly impossible.
Thus we see Al Jazeera playing a
leading role in two revolutions and in the present street level uprising
throughout the Arab world. They truly
have come of age.
Al Jazeera's news revolution
By Regan E. Doherty | Reuters – Thu, 17 Feb,
2011 12:04 AM EST
Inside the newsroom, the atmosphere is alive with energy. Journalists
sit transfixed to their monitors, which show live feeds from central Cairo -- where hundreds
of thousands of protesters are on the brink of pushing another strongman from
power and where Al Jazeera crews have faced repeated police harassment and
detentions. Tapes are piled high in a corner, labeled in scrawling Arabic.
"This is our story," says one Al Jazeera English journalist,
who asks not to be identified because he is not authorised to talk to the
media. "This is the story that proves to the naysayers of the world what
we can do. We took the lead and everyone followed: CNN, Christiane Amanpour --
in spite of harassment, having our tapes stolen, people being beaten up. If you
want to know about Egypt in
the U.S. ,
you're watching Al Jazeera."
Over the past few weeks, much has been made of the power of Al Jazeera,
the Qatari news channel launched 15 years ago by the Gulf Arab state's Emir
Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani with the goal of providing the sort of
independent news that the region's state-run broadcasters had long ignored.
It was Al Jazeera that first grasped the enormity of the Tunisia
uprising and its implications for the region, and Al Jazeera which latched onto
-- critics would say fuelled -- subsequent rumblings in Egypt. And audiences
around the world responded: the network's global audience has rocketed. During
the first two days of the Egyptian protests, livestream viewers watching the
channel over the internet increased by 2,500 percent to 4 million, 1.6 million
of them in the United States, according to Al Anstey, managing director of Al
Jazeera's English-language channel.
"This is a real turning point for us, in terms of recognition of
the integrity of the product we're producing, and showing that there is a true
demand for our content and information," Anstey told Reuters.
But even in its moment of triumph, questions about Al Jazeera remain.
Despite its stated independence and brave journalism, the network unavoidably
plays a political role. Is it, as many in the region charge, sympathetic to
Islamist parties such as Hamas and Hezbollah? Does it target some Middle East regimes while treating others more softly?
And what role, if any, does its wealthy Qatari backer play in all this?
Perhaps ousted Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak said it best during a
visit to Al Jazeera's Qatar
headquarters seven years ago: "All that trouble from this little
matchbox?"
ANGER IN EGYPT
Al Jazeera, Arabic for "the island", has earned the
resentment of leaders in the Arab world -- as well as the admiration of many
ordinary Arabs -- almost from the day it launched in 1996.
The first Arab network to put Israeli officials on the air, the channel
has also hosted guests as varied as Saudi dissidents, feminist activists and
Islamist clerics. "When Israelis first appeared on our screens, people
thought we were funded by the Mossad," one employee said.
In his final weeks in office, Mubarak made little secret of his anger
with Al Jazeera's broadcasts of the protests against his government. The
network broadcast live from Cairo's Tahrir Square throughout the 18 days of
protest, despite its office being closed, journalists beaten and detained, and
tapes and equipment confiscated and destroyed.
In phone calls with western leaders during the uprising, Mubarak
complained about Al Jazeera's -- and Qatar 's
-- role in fomenting unrest, according to senior political sources in Europe . Mubarak told them he believed the emir was
focusing attention on the unrest in Egypt
at the behest of Iran .
It's a complaint that has been made before over the years. Executives of the
station dismiss the charge and say they are solely interested in good
journalism.
Critics point to instances where Al Jazeera has pulled its punches as
evidence of the political role it can play. Initially, the channel's coverage
of Saudi Arabia -- the Arab
world's leading political and economic power -- was extensive, but in 2002 the
kingdom withdrew its ambassador to Doha
partly in protest over Al Jazeera shows on Saudi politics. Relations between
the two states were restored six years later, and observers say Al Jazeera
toned down its Saudi coverage. A clash last March between the United Arab Emirates navy and a
Saudi patrol vessel after a dispute over water boundaries, for example, wasn't
covered by the network.
"They'd have brought on a world of trouble," said one
UK-based source, declining to be named because he feared it would hurt his
employment prospects.
A July 2009 diplomatic cable from the U.S.
embassy in Qatar published
by WikiLeaks puts it this way: "Al Jazeera, the most watched satellite
television station in the Middle East , is heavily
subsidised by the Qatari government and has proved itself a useful tool for the
station's political masters. The station's coverage of events in the Middle
East is relatively free and open, though it refrains from criticising Qatar and its
government. Al Jazeera's ability to influence public opinion throughout the
region is a substantial source of leverage for Qatar, one which it is unlikely
to relinquish. Moreover, the network can also be used as a chip to improve
relations."
Al Jazeera insists the government has zero input. "There's been no
interaction from Qatar
whatsoever," Anstey says. "(In Egypt ) we were on the ground very
quickly, with force, in the first minutes and hours, with total editorial
independence."
Editorially, the Qatari government is "completely hands-off,"
he says. "Egyptian authorities have put a great deal of pressure on us to
stop coverage from Egypt .
But we're on the ground, talking to people in the square, to politicians. We're
resolute in the face of a considerable degree of pressure."
Some experts suggest that Al Jazeera, like media organisations in many
parts of the world, has probably already learned to exercise a degree of
restraint rooted in self-preservation. "I think Al Jazeera itself conducts
self-censorship to ensure no red lines are crossed," said David Roberts,
researcher at Durham University in Britain . "But in general, the
Qatari government is not cherry-picking stories or censoring. They let them run
with any story they want, up to a certain point."
THE VIEW FROM WASHINGTON
The tone from Washington
has softened markedly since the change in the White House. President Obama has
acknowledged watching Al Jazeera English, and the Twitter feed of a State
Department spokesperson in recent weeks called for the release of detained
journalists in Cairo .
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton visited the network's Doha headquarters last year, a tour that was
described by Al Jazeera officials as "cordial."
A State Department source told Reuters that Arabic speakers there have
"quietly preferred" Al Jazeera "to any other news source based
in the Arab world, but I don't think we made it a very public preference, given
its nasty reputation in the U.S. "
While Arab viewers dismiss the far-fetched notion that the channel is
in bed with al Qaeda, many say Al Jazeera can appear sympathetic to extremist
groups such as Hamas, which defeated the more secular Fatah in Palestinian
elections in 2006. That belief appeared to be underlined in January with Al
Jazeera's publication of leaked documents revealing that the Fatah-led
Palestinian Authority had offered multiple concessions to Israel in peace
talks. The revelations, which Al Jazeera shared with Britain 's Guardian newspaper, made
the Palestinian Authority and Fatah look weak and led to the resignation of Chief
Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat, who has accused Al Jazeera trying to bring
down the Palestinian Authority.
Tensions within the Arabic-language channel were highlighted last year
when several female anchors resigned over its conservative dress code.
'THE RIGHT KIND OF CULTURE'
"It's electric," says a Doha-based journalist of the
atmosphere in the network's headquarters as events unfold in Egypt . "Being in the newsroom
is all hands on deck. We know that we're one of the only ones on the ground doing
this. People are chasing journalists in Tahrir Square shouting 'Al
Jazeera!'"
For a region whose authoritarian governments are usually able to squash
stories they don't want published, Al Jazeera represents a sharp cultural
shift, and, many believe, a positive one. Launched with a startup budget of
$137 million and a target of generating revenue within five years, the network
was able to draw talent from the just-folded BBC Arabic.
"They started with the right kind of culture," says Mohamed
Zayani, professor at Georgetown University in Qatar and author of a book on Al
Jazeera. "In terms of the way things were run, the structure was looser,
less bureaucratic and red-tape laden. That was good, because it meant they
could get things done. It's something very important in the business of news,
where time is of the essence."
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