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(page 1 | 2) So the stage was set for Al-Jazeera, which started up five years ago as a state-financed satellite channel that more resembles a public broadcasting operation like BBC, or even a privately owned channel, than the state owned and directed national channels of the rest of the Arab world. The chairman of its board is the nephew of the ruler of Qatar, but he is a journalist in his own right as much as he is a businessman. And Qatar, unlike Saudi Arabia, is not a regional power with all of the inhibitions that come with such power. On the contrary, the ruler of Qatar is committed to transforming this emirate into a liberal constitutional monarchy, and he has abolished the ministry of information as a branch of government that is incompatible with a free press and liberal society. Al-Jazeera fits into his vision. Many of its correspondents, producers, and talk show hosts were recruited from among the one-time staff of the BBC Arabic service, which has ensured Al-Jazeera an incredibly sophisticated studio look and an approach that reflects the BBC World Service tradition of a far more serious journalism, far more field reports or "packages," than the at-times glitzy but usually more shallow quality of CNN's coverage. Al-Jazeera, a 24-hour all-news channel that pursues both aggressive field reporting from across the Arab world as well as from all major news centers outside the Arab world, has also produced its own freewheeling talk shows with viewers commenting or asking questions by telephone. The Al-Jazeera motto for both news coverage and talk shows is, in literal translation from Arabic, "Opinion and Another Opinion," which is the equivalent of that Anglo-American journalism 101 axiom "get both sides of the story." So Al-Jazeera has invariably stepped on many toes, which are particularly sensitive in authoritarian political cultures where anyone in authority rarely has his toes stepped upon. The price it has paid has been periodic closure of its bureaus in many Arab countries, and a relative lack of advertising because of fear by the multinationals that if they advertise on Al-Jazeera they may be cut off from advertising in Saudi mediaand the Saudi domestic market is much bigger and richer than the tiny emirate of Qatar. But Al-Jazeera's popularity throughout the region is extraordinary, and the degree of satellite dish penetration of the markets so extensive in recent years (the receiver dishes getting smaller and cheaper, the satellite transmitters getting bigger and better) that Al-Jazeera now has a bigger market share than any one national channel at nearly any given time. Just as CNN established itself in America as the channel of choice for ongoing, highly dramatic events because of its nearly non-stop and largely live coverage of the Gulf War, so Al-Jazeera definitively established itself as the Arabic satellite station of choice, with its correspondents out in the streets reporting on Arab resistance and Israeli repression, during the Intifada that has raged on in the Israeli-occupied territories of Arab Jerusalem, the West Bank, and Gaza for the past year and has spilled over in the form of radical Palestinian terrorist attacks against civilians within Israel in more recent months. At the risk of permanently losing their audiences, some of the Arab national channels are now establishing news bureaus and erratically but increasingly producing field reports of their own. However, they frequently rely on APTN (Associated Press TV News) to find and if necessary train reporters in the field for themthese new bureaus are customized bureaus, so to speak, because the Arab national channels by and large lack the trained personnel and the competitive drive to do it by themselves. Al-Jazeera's present assets in Afghanistan, its unique access, directly stems from its special relationship with Osama bin Laden established over the years when, as a outcast from the Saudi establishment, bin Laden had little hope of access to either the national Arab channels invariably allied with or at least beholden to Saudi Arabia, or the Saudi-owned private satellite channels. Al-Jazeera cannot be faulted as a mouthpiece for bin Laden anymore than CNN could be faulted as a mouthpiece for Saddam Hussein because of its unique, indeed exclusive television news assets in Baghdad during Desert Storm, when all other TV journalists save CNN's Peter Arnett and company were ordered out of the country. Has bin Laden made use of Al-Jazeera? No doubt, just as Saddam Hussein made use of CNN. (Where was CNN when Iraqi troops stormed into Kuwait and looted and raped during the first days of the occupation? Certainly not there as guests of the Iraqi ministry of Information.) But Al-Jazeera doesn't just broadcast bin Laden videos. It produces packages on the Northern Alliance and does frequent voice interviews with the Northern Alliance's foreign minister, who is the Alliance's most articulate and active spokesman. Al-Jazeera was as proud of the exclusive interview it managed with Tony Blair, following the bin Laden tape broadcast the day the US bombing missions began, as it is of its bin Laden exclusives. And as a matter of course it carries all of the important Washington pronouncements on the war Against terrorism. But does the fact that Al-Jazeera has superior assets than any other channel inside Taliban-controlled Afghanistan skew its coverage, with more time allotted to bin Laden and the Taliban than other channels? No doubt, but the same could be said about CNN's overkill (and frequently boring) use of its Baghdad assets during the Gulf War. The only difference is that Al-Jazeera, in the strict terms of producing informative field reports rather than live camera comment, does a better job (like its mentor BBC) than CNN. Al-Jazeera's journalism (in the strictest sense of the wordwhich means not its often problematic talk shows) on occasion transcends the channel's very self-conscious sense of Arab identity. Al-Jazeera has become in this present crisis as much a global player as CNN or the BBC World Service. Within the Arab world, the long-term effect of Al-Jazeera cannot be but a positive one. Al-Jazeera encourages a new political culture more responsive to facts than conspiracy theories, more gratified and empowered by a journalism that seeks objective truth then a journalism solely of self-confirming perspective. In its commitment to free expression it is the logical ally of any emerging civil society. If it has inflamed the Arabs by its powerful visuals of Israel's cruel repression of a Palestinian people resisting occupation, it has also interviewed Israelis when no other Arab channel would; provided forums for Arab-Israeli debate when no other channel would, and has provided the possibility that Arab perception will shift from demonizing an entire people to a discriminating sense of what forces in Israeli society would perpetuate occupation and injustice and what forces would and have truly sought a just peace. So too its impact today. There is no question but that the bin Laden tapes are having a horrendous impact on the Arab streets. He is emerging as the mythic right-wing Che Guevera of Arab street culture. It is bin Laden's outwardly gentle manner and soft speech, the simplicity of his outward appearance, and above all else his citation of injustices and American double standards familiar to every Arabincluding the overwhelming majority of Arabs genuinely horrified by the murder of nearly six thousand innocent souls on September 11which have made the tapes so dangerous, so potentially destabilizing. And yet if CNN, without a moment's hesitation as an American practitioner of journalism, can run those tapes as a professional duty to its viewers, how can we so easily fault Al-Jazeera? The bin Laden tapes pose a recurrent dilemma that conscientious journalists always worry about and have never resolved: where their responsibilities as journalists end and their responsibilities as citizens and defenders of decency begin. But in the end a major part of the power of those tapes is that they occur in a vacuum, among the present timidity of the moderate Arab leadershipwhich has had in some cases to fight ferocious, deadly battles with its own homegrown terrorist networks that have regrouped abroad under the banner of bin Laden and the patronage of the Taliban. Where, in the almost arrogant imperial indifference of American war planners to obvious basic intelligence (a forgotten art at the CIA since the late 1950s) are the counter-bin Ladens, as once upon a time we successfully allied and assisted Christian Socialists, Social Democrats, and even Trotskyists in the Cold War against Stalinism for the soul of Western Europe? Burhanuddin Rabbani, president of the remnant pre-Taliban Afghan government in semi-exile that is supported by the Northern Alliance, was a student at Egypt's great center for Islamic theological studies, Al Azhar University. He writes poetry in Persian and speaks fluent Arabic. He is the civilized face of Afghan Islam. Why hasn't Rabbani been encouraged to tour the Arab world, and through his public presence and his interviews on Arab television, be allowed to open the minds of the Arab masses to the crimes of bin Laden and the Taliban? It is this void, this timidity, this moral indifference on the part of both American and moderate Arab leaderships, as well as America's double standard towards Israel and the Arabs (scandalous in the eyes of nearly everyone in the world but America and Israel) that provides the context that makes these tapes so dangerous, as much if not more than Al-Jazeera's audacity in playing them. TBS
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continued: The Sweet and Sour Success of Al-Jazeera by S. Abdallah Schleifer |
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| Copyright
2001 Transnational Broadcasting Studies TBS is published by the Adham Center for Television Journalism, the American University in Cairo E-mail: TBS@aucegypt.edu |
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