17 June 2012 By Tariq Alhomayed The day after Dr. Mohamed Mursi was announced as
Egypt's president, Iranian Fars News Agency – one of
the prominent Iranian media outlets that promotes the
discourse of the Supreme Guide, the Iranian
Revolutionary Guard Corp [IRGC] and the Iranian
president – published a lengthy interview it claims it
conducted with the new Egyptian president. The Iranian Fars News Agency claimed this alleged
interview was conducted by its correspondent in Cairo
with President Mursi "hours before the final results
of the presidential election were announced". This
interview resulted in anxious responses inside Egypt
and abroad, particularly as Fars News Agency quoted
Dr. Mursi as saying that "we must recover good
relations with Iran on the basis of mutual interests,
developing areas of political coordination and
economic cooperation as this will create strategic
balance in the region, and this is part of my
Renaissance program." The Fars News Agency added that
the Egyptian president had "rejected rumours and media
news about paying his first [official] foreign trip to
Saudi Arabia" quoting Mursi as saying "I have not said
this, and my first international trip following my
victory in the presidential elections have not yet
been specified." Of course, the Egyptian presidency, and the Dr.
Mohamed Mursi campaign, rushed to deny this news
saying that no such interview had been conducted.
However at the time of writing this article Fars News
Agency continues to claim that this interview did take
place, whilst it remains available on the Iranian
media outlet's website in Arabic and Farsi. What is
interesting is that the Iranian news agency has
uploaded a complete audio recording of the interview,
and after personally listening to this it appears that
the speaker is not Dr. Mursi at all. This is also what
Reuters news agency indicated, saying that the voice
in the recording does not match the voice of the new
Egyptian president. What is particularly "interesting"
about Fars News Agency uploading an audio recording of
this alleged and false interview is that this audio
recording is only available on the Persian version of
the website, not the Arabic. This is as if an Iranian
reader will listen to the Arabic audio recording of
the interview and follow the translated dialogue in
Farsi! In reality this Iranian media scandal is not the
first of its kind, nor will it be the last, indeed
there are a number of precedents for this in different
Iranian media outlets, particularly Arabic-language
media, including those being published in Iran, Iraq
and Lebanon. This is also something that is present in
various types of media, whether we are talking about
print media or television media. This is because
fabrication and forgery is a famous game played by
many Iranian news agencies. These Tehran-affiliated
media outlets and internet sites carry out what I
previously described as "news laundering", namely
Iranian news agencies or affiliated websites leaking
different news reports, interviews and statements.
This includes media outlets with close ties to
Hezbollah and other organizations. Following this, the
remaining Iranian media outlets report and promote
this news, and at this point any statements rejecting
or denying this news are of no consequence, as as it
is already too late. The victims of this are not just
states, but also senior officials and leadership
figures, and even media figures. In addition to this,
the media that has most participated in this scandal
and fraud, over a long period of time, is the al-Assad
media of all types, and so we must be aware of this!
Tariq Alhomayed is the Editor-in-Chief of Asharq
Al-Awsat, the youngest person to be appointed that
position. He holds a BA degree in Media studies from
King Abdul Aziz University in Jeddah, and has also
completed his Introductory courses towards a Master's
degree from George Washington University in Washington
D.C. He is based in London. Comments 💬 التعليقات |