| July 11, 2008 Meanwhile, according to a
report by al-Jazeera, the conflict in Darfur is a news story
that has been widely and emotively covered by western media but
has attracted relatively little coverage within the Arab media.
The Listening Post's Salah Khadr finds out why.
There are many similarities between the violence in Iraq and
Darfur from the estimate of the number of civilians killed to
paramilitaries operating closely linked to the government
forces, to victims who are targeted for membership of an ethnic
group.
However international media coverage generally reports one as a
civil war or cycle of insurgency and the other as a genocide.
More than 200,000 people have died in the conflict in Darfur,
with millions more turned into refugees and the situation
becoming a picture of "hell on earth" according to the UN.
Sudan's population is 40 per cent Arab and Arabs are at the
heart of the conflict, but for many in the Arab world, the
humanitarian catastrophe may as well not exist.
The reason being the Arab media have largely ignored it.
Lawrence Pintak, a journalist and Arab media expert, says the
problem with Darfur when it comes to the Arab media is that it
does not fit the template of Arabs being the victims and other
people the aggressors.
"Arabs here are good guys and bad guys," he says.
'State of denial'
"I think we are in a state of denial," Jehad Khazen, a former
editor of the al-Hayat newspaper, says.
"People say 'the Arabs or Muslims – cannot do this – it did not
happen' – but they did do this and it did happen - and they have
to reconcile themselves to the fact."
Just because the Arab media does not cover a lot of what happens
in the Darfur crisis does not mean that Arab public opinion is
not interested says Nadim Hasbani, an Arab media analyst from
the International Crisis Group.
"A Zogby poll around March or April in 2007 showed there is a
real eagerness in Arab public opinion to read more and learn
more about what is happening in Darfur. But this is not
reflected in the Arab media."
It could be argued that geography plays a role in the limited
coverage given the conflict is in Africa, not the Middle East.
But whilst Darfur largely remains a non-event on the Arab media
scene, European and North American media travel from greater
distances to cover this story.
"There is always going to be some sort of reluctance to demonise
their own, the Arabs as they will see themselves," Opheera
McDoom, Reuters correspondent in Darfur, says.
"But I think while there has been coverage in the Arab media,
there has been a reluctance in the Arab media to go to Darfur
and check things out for themselves.
"I see a lot more western media going to Darfur and spending
weeks in Darfur than I do Arab media and that is where you see
the difference. You will get a much more in-depth coverage and a
lot more interesting coverage if you actually go to Darfur, and
that is where the Arab media has fallen down."
However, some Arab media analysts say that the implied rationale
from the American media in particular is that the story in
Darfur is Arabs killing Africans because they do not know
anything other than violence.
US suspicion
"That's what the audience is left to conclude," says Mahmood
Mahdani of Columbia University.
"So that's of course not acceptable if you are part of the Arab
media. You can immediately sense that you are being caricatured
and demonised at the same time."
It is questionable, however, if such suspicions over the
motivation and vigour of US media coverage account for the
strategy of limited coverage from many Arab media outlets.
What is most striking to me is that the media coverage has a
single focus and that's a focus on atrocities, on atrocity
stories, there's no attempt to place them in context," Mahdani
says.
"There's no attempt to explain, to locate it historically, to
show that there's any change happening.
"I think it is about linking Darfur with the larger war on
terror by portraying and framing the perpetrators of violence in
Darfur as Arabs."
The 22 Arab states all have a distinctive media output and often
it is not so much a question of following an agenda but deciding
which agenda to follow.
"It is not one agenda – every Arab government has a different
agenda from the other – Egypt is more interested in Darfur as
Sudan is next door and doesn't want a spill over," Khazen says.
"But a country a like the UAE or Oman – find they are not
directly involved and they can't influence events – so you find
that the coverage is much more limited there."
Government hindrance
Covering Darfur is also hindered by the government of Sudan who
have imposed strict access criteria and will often not issue
visas or take journalists to government-controlled areas.
"They [the government] know that if more information comes out
there will be added pressure on the Sudanese government,"
Hasbani says.
"It's not easy to cover Darfur – its not easy for Western
Journalists and its not easy for Arab journalists," Lawrence
Pintak says.
"I talked to an Al Jazeera correspondent who was based in
Khartoum a while back – and he said to go and cover Darfur – you
have to go to Khartoum – then to Nairobi – to West Africa up to
Cameroon, across from Cameroon to Chad and then in through the
back door to the refugee camps.
"If you don't do that then you are on a guided tour and you may
as well go to Disneyland."
The result of these restrictions has been a move toward more
analytical coverage and away from hard reporting.
"What's happened in Arab media is that we have so much coverage
of the political issues related to Darfur like – what is the UK,
France, US, UN reaction to Darfur – but what we really need
actually is not the political coverage, but the coverage from
the ground," Hasbani says.
"What are the facts, what are the stories, where are the images
of the refugees of the people being killed? These are images we
don't have but are the images we need – its not about the
political process." |