Archive for the 'Uncategorized' Category

NUJ members face crucial vote

Sunday, June 22nd, 2008

The ballot for the election of NUJ deputy general secretary ends on July 4. Media Workers Against the War encourages our supporters in the union to vote for Michelle Stanistreet.

Michelle has been an inspirational figure at the Daily Express and Star, leading campaigns against the newspapers’ racism and Islamophobia, making the union’s “Journalism Matters” campaign a great success and fighting to build strong grassroots union organisation. She has been open about her opposition to the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan.

Journalists’ working conditions are intimately connected to the quality of the public service they provide, as Nick Davies has shown in “Flat Earth News”, which sets out to explain the media’s failure on Iraqi WMD. The government’s assault on the BBC over its coverage of the “war on terror” has included massive job cuts, particularly in news and current affairs.

Targetting of the media by the military in war zones has made journalists’ work more dangerous, while “terror law” restrictions on reporting at home threaten journalists with arrests and prosecutions. For these reasons the NUJ needs a deputy general secretary who recognises the importance of the war for our union.

See Michelle’s election website here: www.michelle4dgs.org.uk

Media and war briefing: May 28

Wednesday, May 28th, 2008

Regular update of analysis, events and campaigns. In this briefing:

  1. SATURDAY: MWAW activists’ meeting
  2. Police use “terror” laws to attack journalists
  3. MEETING: Racism, war and Muslims
  4. George Bush in London, protest Sunday June 15
  5. So wrong for so long: US newspapers and Iraq
  6. Somalia: Hidden catastrophe, hidden agenda
  7. Media coverage of Palestine and Israel
  8. From Basra to Beirut: US is gunning for Iran
  9. Join our campaign

1. SATURDAY: MWAW activists’ meeting

There will be an activists’ meeting of Media Workers Against the War to discuss campaigning priorities this Saturday (May 31) at 2pm in the Terrace Café, South Bank Centre (nearest tube: Waterloo, Embankment). We’ll sit outside if the sun shines…

Agenda items include the news blackout on Somalia, Alton’s editorship of the Indie, an autumn conference, MWAW media briefings, and lots more

All welcome! Please R.S.V.P. to this email or call Dave on 07801 789 297

2. Police use “terror” laws to attack journalists

Journalists face arrest, prosecution and even deportation under “anti-terror” laws that give police extensive new powers. The government is rushing to deport an Algerian editor after police seized him for downloading a document from a US government website. The case follows the ongoing attempt by police to force a leading journalist to hand over notes from interviews with a former Islamist.

Read the full article here: www.mwaw.net/2008/05/28/terrorlaws

3. MEETING: Racism, the war on terror and the Muslim community

The War on terror has been accompanied by a rise in racism targeted at Muslims. Stop the War are hosting a series of meetings across the country with high profile speakers.

London meeting: Tuesday June 3, 7.30pm

With speakers:
Moazzam Begg, George Galloway MP, Anas Al-Tikriti, Lindsey german, Louise Christian, David Edgar

Bishopsgate Institute
230 Bishopsgate EC2M
www.bishopsgate.org.uk
Nearest tube: Liverpool Street

Called by: Stop the War Coalition www.stopwar.org.uk

4. Bush in London protest

War criminal George Bush will be visiting Britain on Sunday 15 June. No doubt he will receive a sycophantic welcome from Gordon Brown. The anti-war majority, however, will recall the hundreds of thousands who have died, the millions driven from their homes and the utter devastation resulting from the illegal attacks on Iraq and Afghanistan.

Stop the War will be organising a protest in London on that Sunday. For details, watch this space: www.stopwar.org.uk

5. So wrong for so long: US newspapers and Iraq

For the first time a mainstream editor - who just happens also to be a professional media-watcher - has written a book attacking the Iraq war coverage by the US corporate press.

Read the full article here: www.mwaw.net/2008/05/23/mitchell

6. Somalia: Hidden catastrophe, hidden agenda

Media Lens has a very useful summary of the realities underlying Bush’s war of terror on Somalia and the media’s failure to report it. It demonstrates how the government’s strategic silence on the proxy “war on terror” being fought in Somalia is reflected in press reporting:

Read the analysis here: http://tinyurl.com/6z8saz

7. Media coverage of Palestine and Israel

Arab Media Watch has compiled a study on the different language used to describe Israeli and Palestinian deaths. It shows that Israeli deaths are afforded strong, emotive adjectives, while Palestinian fatalities are reported in a much more sanitised, measured way.

View the full report here: http://tinyurl.com/4545nf

8. From Basra to Beirut: US is gunning for Iran

Robert Fisk sees the recent eruption of conflict in Beirut as a “proxy” war between Washington and Tehran. Add this observation to US recent accusation that Hezbollah is training Iraqi militants in Iran, and the American military’s promised dossier on Iran’s role in the Iraq war, and we can see that the old drumbeat of war on Iran is growing louder again.

Read the full article here: www.mwaw.net/2008/05/21/iran

9. Join us!

Join Media Workers Against the War to help us campaign for fair coverage of the “war on terror” and troops out of Iraq and Afghanistan.

Who we are: www.mwaw.net/about

Download a standing order form - a few pounds a month would be a huge boost to our campaign:

http://mwaw.net/standingorder.pdf

Seymour Hersh on Lebanon: US strategy backs Islamist militants

Friday, May 25th, 2007

Islamist militants entrenched in a Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon are facing an ultimatum to surrender or face further military action. Democracy Now!, the US daily alternative radio and TV show, carried this interview – which you can also watch and listen to on the site – with veteran investigative journalist Seymour Hersh, in which he discusses the evidence he has found for the US government and its allies in the Middle East backing Sunni Islamist groups such as Fatah al-Islam, which is at the centre of the bloody battle with the Lebanese army. The interview is backed up a comment piece By Charles Harb in Thursday’s Guardian.

The Lebanese government accuses Fatah al-Islam of having ties with al-Qaeda and the Syrian government. Investigative journalist Seymour Hersh joins us to talk about another theory of who is backing the militant group - the Lebanese government itself, along with the United States.

Last March, Hersh reported the U.S. and Saudi governments are covertly backing militant Sunni groups like Fatah al-Islam as part of an overarching foreign policy against Iran and growing Shia influence. [includes rush transcript] Lebanon’s defense minister has said Islamist militants entrenched in a Palestinian refugee camp must surrender or face further military action. The ultimatum followed three days of fierce fighting between the army and the Fatah al-Islam group. The army has laid siege to the Nahr al-Bared camp since the fighting erupted on Sunday, bombarding it with tank fire and artillery shells. At least eighty people have died with dozens more wounded.

On Wednesday, an informal ceasefire enabled thousands of residents to flee the camp. Some headed for another Palestinian refugee camp nearby, while others traveled to the neighboring city of Tripoli. The International Committee of the Red Cross estimates between thirteen and fifteen thousand refugees have left Nahr al-Bared. The camp is home to thirty thousand people. The internal conflict is the bloodiest in Lebanon since the civil war ended 17 years ago.

The Lebanese government accuses Fatah al-Islam of having ties with al-Qaeda and the Syrian government. But there’s another theory of who is backing the militant group - the Lebanese government itself, along with the United States. Last March, investigative journalist Seymour Hersh reported in the New Yorker that the U.S. and Saudi governments are covertly backing militant Sunni groups like Fatah al-Islam as part of an overarching foreign policy against Iran and growing Shia influence. Seymour Hersh joins us now on the line from Washington DC.

JUAN GONZALEZ: Lebanon’s defense minister has said Islamist militants entrenched in a Palestinian refugee camp must surrender or face further military action. The ultimatum followed three days of fierce fighting between the army and the Fatah al-Islam group. The army has laid siege to the Nahr al-Bared camp since the fighting erupted on Sunday, bombarding it with tank fire and artillery shells. At least eighty people have died, with dozens more wounded.

On Wednesday, an informal ceasefire enabled thousands of residents to flee the camp. Some headed for another Palestinian refugee camp nearby, while others traveled to the neighboring city of Tripoli. The International Committee of the Red Cross estimates between 13,000 and 15,000 refugees have left Nahr al-Bared. The camp is home to 30,000 people. The internal conflict is the bloodiest in Lebanon since the civil war ended seventeen years ago.

AMY GOODMAN: The Lebanese government accuses Fatah al-Islam of having ties with al-Qaeda and the Syrian government. But there’s another theory of who’s backing the militant group: the Lebanese government itself, along with the United States. Last March, investigative journalist Seymour Hersh reported in The New Yorker magazine that the US and Saudi governments are covertly backing militant Sunni groups like Fatah al-Islam as part of an overarching foreign policy against Iran and growing Shia influence.

Seymour Hersh joins us now on the phone from his home in Washington, D.C. Welcome to Democracy Now!, Sy.

SEYMOUR HERSH: Good morning.

AMY GOODMAN: Can you explain what you learned?

SEYMOUR HERSH: Well, very simply — this is over the winter — the government made — I think the article is called “The Redirection.” There was a major change of policy by the United States government, essentially, which was that we were going to — the American government would join with the Brits and other Western allies and with what we call the moderate Sunni governments — that is, the governments of Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Egypt — and join with them and with Israel to fight the Shia.

One of the major goals for America, of course, was the obsession the Bush White House has with Iran, and the other obsession they have is, of course — is in fear — is of Hezbollah, the Party of God, that is so dominant in — the Shia Party of God that’s so dominant in southern Lebanon that once — and whose leader Hassan Nasrallah wants to play a bigger political role and is doing quite a bit to get there and is in direct confrontation with Siniora.

And so, you have a situation where the Sunni government, pretty much in control now, the American-supported Sunni government headed by Fouad Siniora, who was a deputy or an aide to Rafik Hariri, the slain leader of Lebanon, that government has — we know, the International Crisis Group reported a couple years ago that the son Saad Hariri, the son of Rafik Hariri, who’s now a major player in the parliament of Lebanon, he put up $40,000 bail to free four Sunni fundamentalists, Jihadist-Salafists — which you will — who were tied directly to — you know, this word “al-Qaeda” is sort of ridiculous — they were tied to jihadist groups. And God knows, al-Qaeda, in terms of Osama bin Laden, doesn’t have much to do with what we’re talking about. These are independently, more or less, you can call them, fanatical jihadists.

And so, the goal — part of the goal in Lebanon, part of the way this policy played out, was, with Saudi help, Prince Bandar — if you remember him — we remember Prince Bandar, the Saudi prince, as a major player in Iran-Contra and also in the American effort two decades ago — if you remember, we supported Osama bin Laden and other jihadists in Afghanistan against the Russians, and that didn’t work out so well. Well, we run right back to the well again, and we began supporting some of these jihadist groups, and particularly — in the article, I did name Fatah al-Islam.

The idea was to provide them with some arms and some money and some basic equipment so — these are small units, a couple hundred people. There were three or four around the country given the same help covertly, the goal being they would be potential enemies of Hezbollah in case of warfare; in case Nasrallah decided to do something physical, get kinetic, in Lebanon, the Sunni Siniora government would have some very tough guys on its side, period. That’s the policy.

JUAN GONZALEZ: Well, Sy Hersh, if that is true, then what has led to the current fighting now? If the Lebanese government had been backing the group, why is it now attacking it?

SEYMOUR HERSH: Well, first of all, the Lebanese army is very distinct. Let me begin by saying nobody really knows anything right now. I mean, there’s a lot — one of the things about crises is you learn that you really get to play much later. But based on common sense and what I’m reading, the Lebanese army has maintained an amazing sort of neutrality, which is surprising. The army has not been a pawn of the Siniora government.

As you know, the American government — the American position right now — there’s a stand-off politically. You cannot discuss what’s going on without discussing the overall politics. There’s a stand-off politically right now, a very serious one, in Lebanon. The government is polarized. The government in power really has no legal basis to make any changes in cabinet positions, etc., because it’s not a constitutional government, because Hezbollah, which had five members of the parliament — five members of the cabinet and a dozen or so members in the parliament, Hezbollah pulled out months ago. And there were street protests, protests against Siniora. And right now, you have Hezbollah in league with a Christian leader named Aoun, a former chief of staff for the army. Aoun and Nasrallah are in an amazing partnership against the Siniora government. And where this breaks down and who’s going to win this stand-off — it’s been going on since last December — isn’t clear. America clearly supports Siniora. But there’s a big brutal fight going. And the Lebanese army stayed out of it and was pretty much, very much, independent, in the sense that when there were street demonstrations, they did not beat up on the Nasrallah people. They were very impartial.

So I think the story that we have is that there was a crime, and they were chasing people into one of the Palestinian camps, which are always hotbeds. God knows the Palestinians are the end of the stick, not only for the West, but also for the Arab world. Nobody pays much attention to them and those places. I’ve been to Tripoli and been into the camps, and they are seething, as they should be. You know, rational people don’t like being mistreated. And in any case, so what you have is, what seems to me, just a series — the word you could use is “unintended consequences.” I don’t think anybody in the Siniora government anticipated that the people they were covertly supporting to some degree — I got an email the other day, and I have not checked this out, from somebody who was in the community, in the intelligence community and still consults with the community, he says, “Why don’t we ask more about the American arms that the fighters of Fatah al-Islam have, are brandishing?” I don’t know if that’s true or not, but I did get that email. And so, that could be true. Both Saudi money and American money, not directly, but indirectly, was fed into these groups.

And what is the laugh riot and the reason I’m actually talking to you guys about this — I usually don’t like to do interviews unless I have a story in The New Yorker — the reason I’m talking about it is because the American government keeps on putting out this story that Syria is behind the Fatah group, which is just beyond belief. There’s no way — it may be possible, but the chances of it are very slight, simply because Syria is a very big supporter, obviously, of Nasrallah, and Bashar al-Assad has told me that he’s in awe of Nasrallah, that he worships at his feet and has great respect for him. The idea that the Syrians would be sponsoring Sunni jihadist groups whose sole mission are to kill the apostates — that is, anybody who doesn’t support their view, the Wahhabi or Salafist view of Sunni religion — that includes the Shia — anybody who doesn’t believe — support these guys’ religions are apostates and are killable, that’s basically one of the crazy aspects of all this, and it’s just inconceivable. Nothing can be ruled out, but that doesn’t make much case, and I noticed that in the papers today there’s fewer and fewer references to this. The newspapers in America are beginning to wise up, that this can’t be — this isn’t very logical. The White House is putting it out hot and heavy as part of the anti-Syria campaign, but it’s not flying, because it doesn’t make sense. So there we are. It’s another mess.

You might think that one of the reasons — I think I wrote about this in The New Yorker — one of the things that the Saudi Bandar had promised us was that we can control the jihadists. We can control them, he assured us. Don’t worry about getting in bed with these bad guys, because, as we remember, the same kind of assurances were given to us in the late 1980s, when we supported, as I said, bin Laden and others in the war against Russia, the Mujahideen war, and that, of course, bit us on the ass. And this is, too. So there we are.

AMY GOODMAN: Seymour Hersh, what about the role of Vice President Dick Cheney, the Deputy National Security Advisor Elliott Abrams?

SEYMOUR HERSH: Well, you always — any time you have violent anti-Iran policy and anti-Shia policy, you have to start looking there. Look, clearly this president is deeply involved in this, too, but what I hear from my people, of course, the players — it’s always Cheney, Cheney. Cheney meets with Bush at least once a week. They have a lunch. They usually have a scheduled lunch. And out of that comes a lot of big decisions. We don’t know what’s ever said at that meeting. And this is — talk about being opaque, this is a government that is so hidden from us.

So I can’t — I can tell you that — you know, the thing that’s amazing about this government, the thing that’s really spectacular, is even now how they can get their way mostly with a lot of the American press. For example, I do know — and, you know, you have to take it on face value. If you’ve been reading me for a long time, you know a lot of the things I write are true or come out to be more or less true. I do know that within the last month, maybe four, four-and-a-half weeks ago, they made a decision that because of the totally dwindling support for the war in Iraq, we go back to the al-Qaeda card, and we start talking about al-Qaeda. And the next thing you know, right after that, Bush went to the Southern Command — this was a month ago — and talked, mentioned al-Qaeda twenty-seven times in his speech. He did so just the other day this week — al-Qaeda this, al-Qaeda that. All of a sudden, the poor Iraqi Sunnis, I mean, they can’t do anything without al-Qaeda. It’s only al-Qaeda that’s dropping the bombs and causing mayhem. It’s not the Sunni and Shia insurgents or militias. And this policy just gets picked up, although there’s absolutely no empirical basis. Most of the pros will tell you the foreign fighters are a couple percent, and then they’re sort of leaderless in the sense that there’s no overall direction of the various foreign fighters. You could call them al-Qaeda. You can also call them jihadists and Salafists that want to die fighting the Americans or the occupiers in Iraq and they come across the border. Whether this is — there’s no attempt to suggest there’s any significant coordination of these groups by bin Laden or anybody else, and the press just goes gaga. And so, they went gaga a little bit over the Syrian connection to the activities in Tripoli. It’s just amazing to me, you guys.

AMY GOODMAN: Seymour Hersh, I want to thank you very much for being with us, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, writes for The New Yorker magazine, speaking to us from Washington, D.C.

The Guardian and Iraq: Bad news

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2007

Tuesday’s (May 22) splash by Simon Tisdall in the Guardian marks something of a watershed: in the words of analyst David Edwards of Media Lens, it is the “single worst piece of journalism I can recall reading” in the paper.

The article claimed to present evidence that Iran was uniting with al-Qaeda to attack US and UK forces in Iraq. But the 3-page article making this claim, all 1,200 words of it, cited just one single, unnamed source throughout (”a senior US official in Baghdad”), and there was not a single quote from any expert who would question the allegations – although there are many who would.

How could crude and dangerous PR like this take up the first three pages of the Guardian? When the New York Times ran a similarly credulous front page in February headlined ‘Deadliest Bomb in Iraq is Made by Iran, US Says’, the newspaper was widely accused of having learned nothing from the Iraq WMD debacle. How could the Guardian fall into the same trap?

David Edwards’ email to the Guardian’s editor, Alan Rusbridger, was forwarded to us. It reads:

“Dear Alan

“I’ve been reading the Guardian for many years now. I have to say that Simon Tisdall’s front cover piece today is the single worst piece of journalism I can recall reading in your paper. I base the judgment on the lack of even the tiniest scrap of evidence in support of the anonymous official claims, the unwillingness to subject these claims to any journalistic scrutiny, the potentially lethal nature of the claims for millions of people in the region, and the extremely high-profile coverage afforded what is actually crude propaganda masquerading as a news report.

“We’ve disagreed with you on many occasions, but I’m just aghast that you could put this on the front page. I’m assuming you’re not away and that you did actually see it.

“Yours in amazement and dismay…”

The Guardian’s senior editors appear to have realised early on that something might be amiss. The paper’s website carried a defensive report on the discussion at the morning news conference on Tuesday. An indication of its weakness, however, is that it cites the Telegraph in its support, apparently unaware that the Telegraph’s reporting of Iran is no model of good journalism.

Media Workers Against the War also wrote to the Guardian on Tuesday, pointing out that the paper was vulnerable to the accusation of having learned nothing from the Iraq WMD debacle. The Guardian’s associate editor Elisabeth Ribbans replied a few hours later. She wrote:

“Thank you for your email to the letters desk, which has been forwarded to me for a personal response. For the record, Simon Tisdall requested the interviews with US officials in Baghdad and not the other way around. The article should be viewed in the light of Simon’s extensive and well-sourced reporting from and about the region, as well as the record of the paper, which certainly cannot be accused of being a mouthpiece for the US administration. Today’s front-page story is just one more part of a jigsaw of the growing power struggle in the region and our editors thought it in the public interest to publish the story.”

Two points can be made in response. First, it is not immediately clear which is worse, publishing PR that is sent to you or actively soliciting it.

Second, MWAW did not accuse the paper of being a “mouthpiece for the US administration”. This suggestion is a straw man. We proposed that the paper had forgotten how the WMD nonsense was used to whip up pro-war sentiment against Iraq. This same accusation was leveled at the entire British media by the Guardian’s own columnist, Peter Wilby, in a recent piece on Iran.

How has it come to this? How could the Guardian stoop so low?

First, the British media have shifted noticeably to the right. Yasmin Alibhai-Brown and Johann Hari have recently made this point in relation to the BBC (see the article on this website), but it applies more widely. Since the sacking of Piers Morgan from the Mirror and Greg Dyke from the BBC, the media have been bullied and browbeaten by the government, resulting in a climate of timidity and submission at senior levels.

A consequence is that editors tend to forget Harold Evans’ legendary warning to reporters at the Sunday Times: “Always ask yourself when interviewing a politician, why is this bastard lying to me?”

A further consequence is that only the powerful are now considered credible sources. “Balance” is reduced to quoting officials of one government (in this case the US) against officials of another (in this case Iran).

Further, It means that senior editors move in a rarified environment where they have no contact with arguments generated by social forces outside the narrow circle of government. The mass anti-war movement and its leaders are dismissed with a disdainful sneer.

Finally, the Guardian’s senior editors have been inconsistent friends of peace. The paper calls for more troops for Afghanistan, and on Iraq it joins the chorus of hand-wringing in the British media but pointedly refrains from calling for any timetable for troop withdrawal.

Nevertheless, Tuesday’s front page marks a qualitative shift for the paper. People who have read the Guardian in recent years frequently complain that the paper has lost its way, but often find it hard to put their finger on just what is going on. Now we know.

Please read the article in question and write to the Guardian with your opinions. Please also post them as comments to this blog.

And lastly, here is Juan Cole’s essential blog on Tuesday subjecting the front page to whithering scorn:

“I suppose I have to link to this silly article by poor Simon Tisdall in of all places, The Guardian, whom someone is using to push a sinister agenda. Yes, its sources are looney in positing a coming offensive jointly sponsored by Iran, the Mahdi Army and al-Qaeda. Anyone who reads IC [i.e. Juan Cole’s blog] regularly will see immediately holes in this story.

“At a time when Sunni Arab guerrillas are said to be opposing “al-Qaeda in Mesopotamia” for its indiscriminate violence against Iraqis, including Shiites, we are now expected to believe that Shiite Iran is allying with it. And, it claims that the Iranian Revolutionary Guards are shelling the Green Zone. The parliament building that was hit today by such shelling is dominated by the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council and its paramilitary, the Badr Organization. Who trained Badr? The Iranian Revolutionary Guards. And they are trying to hit their own guys . . . why? By the way, the US has 16,000 suspected insurgents in custody. Tisdall should ask how many of them are Iranian. (Hint: close to none. What, do they just run faster than the others?)

“The article even traffics in the ridiculous assertion that Iran is backing hyper-Sunni, Shiite-killing Taliban in Afghanistan. Why not just cut to the quick and openly say that Supreme Jurisprudent Ali Khamenei is in reality . . . Satan! It really is discouraging that Tisdall didn’t report instead on what crazy things the US military spokesmen in Iraq told him.

“US military spokesmen have been trying to push implausible articles about Shiite Iran supporting Sunni insurgents for a couple of years now, and with virtually the sole exception of the New York Times, no one in the journalistic community has taken these wild charges seriously. But The Guardian?”

Dave Crouch

BBC ‘open to right-wing populism’

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2007

The BBC’s in-house magazine, Ariel, has published this hard-hitting critique by Yasmin Alibhai-Brown, who accuses the Corporation of “a profoundly illiberal agenda” and argues that “BBC shock jock presenters and producers know their fortunes can only get better”. The article is unavailable online - except here on mwaw.net. It should be read together with John Kampfner’s critique and Johann Hari’s recent article in the Independent.
The article, as publised in Ariel, starts here:

The BBC that helped keep this immigrant in Britain has sold out to ‘right wing populism’ and allows extreme, angry voices too much airtime.

There have been two moments in my life in England as an immigrant when I have made serious plans to quit and move to Canada. The first was in 1975 when I had finished my M.Phil at Oxford. Relatives and friends who had moved to Canada from Uganda (where I came from in 1972, the year Asians were expelled) had settled better, were welcomed more warmly than we who had ended up here. Remember we were not refugees but ultra-loyal British subjects. Enoch Powell was the hero then and we had entered a bitter place.

In 1975, a Canadian friend I’d made in Oxford contacted his local MP and together they persuaded my ex-husband and myself to migrate. We didn’t. One reason was that I couldn’t part from the BBC and Call My Bluff and Just a Minute and the trademark sombre, planetary voices delivering the news that sounded truer than any other truth. (That was back then, when I was not a sceptical journalist).

The second time was in 1996 when I had a newspaper job lined up in Toronto and just as we made final moves, I got a column to write in the Independent, a dream I had had for years. Again, when assessing whether it was the right decision, the BBC floated right up, joining the top reasons why Britain still had a hold on my heart.

So I have stayed, unable to wean myself off the BBC, which played into my ears as a child in Africa, like perennial soothing sounds of an ocean washing in imagined worlds. My dad, a news junkie and anglophile, never went out in the evenings before listening to the World Service news. He missed birthdays, funeral prayers, weddings all for his BBC.

I picked up his passion. Even now, in order for the broadcasts to sound as authentic and dependable as they did in the 50s, 60s and 70s, I need crackles to disturb the reception. It gives the impression that the powerful are trying to stop us listening.

When Idi Amin came to power, I was at Makerere University, then one of the finest in the world. Radio Uganda was playing My Boy Lollipop all day long interspersed with ominous warnings from military men. The crackling, valiant BBC told us what we needed desperately to know, though I now realise it was never the whole truth. It passed over the fact that Idi Amin was supported by Britain, the US and Israel, chosen to be their placed man in the Cold War playing out in Africa. Still, that trust and devotion would not be shaken.

Defenders of the Blairite onslaught

Of course a love like that sometimes hurts and disappoints. For too many years I have moaned about the lack of black and Asian reporters, editors, managers, controllers, and brand names. That wilful neglect continues to wound. As one of the two political columnists of colour in the national press (Gary Younge being the other) I expect to be seen as equal to my white peers. I am not. My colour and now culture limits what the Beeb believes I can or should do. Ah well. At least I have what is patronisingly called ‘access’.

However, I always, always defended the corporation and licence fee because it projected universal, good, liberal values – decency, justice, fairness, democracy, civil rights, national confidence, a common humanity, freedom, civilised conduct and the belief, if not the practice, of equality.

Thatcherism arrived and with it an onslaught on these principles denounced as ‘leftie’ or ‘politically correct’. The decade of Blairism produced further pressures, this time by the new right disguised as the new left. More alarmingly, the big boys and some girls too who lead the BBC were now sympathetic to these New Labour state controllers. In the aftermath of the Gilligan affair, I was truly shocked by how many journalists and editors privately told me they agreed with the Blairite onslaught and that Dyke was out of order.

Gilligan was proven right but the centre of gravity at the BBC is now to the right of where it was under Dyke. As my colleague Johann Hari wrote recently in the Independent: ‘The BBC’s most famous and high profile presenters today are figures on the right and make increasingly little effort to hide it.’ They chase each other for copies of the Daily Mail; they ceaselessly rail against feminism, equality campaigns, state interventions to promote health and safety and of course immigration. All progressive action these days gets stamped with the words ‘politically correct’ and the consensus at the BBC is that PC is always mad, bad and highly dangerous.

And still they cry foul, the right wing tabloids and parliamentarians.

Enigma of ‘radical impartiality’

This new century brought the extraordinary force of people power to radio, the web and new technology. It is shaking up all media outlets. The BBC, already too open to right wing populism and charged up to fight political correctness, is set for a further lurch away from its old values. BBC ‘shock jock’ presenters and producers know their fortunes can only get better. Vocal people use phone in programmes and the web to incessantly complain they are not being heard.

The trick is now used by experts too. Andrew Green, the anti-immigration prophet of Migration Watch, is never off the BBC but claims he is not allowed to present his views. The perpetually angry are also more than likely to be anti-immigration, anti-Europe, anti-equalities provision, anti-Muslim, nationalistic, pro-punishment, fearful and bursting with self pity and self righteousness.

I was recently asked to chair an internal BBC debate – part of the Audio and Music Festival. The subject was the enigmatic term ‘radical impartiality’, a new brand, potentially a bold new direction for the massive ship that is the BBC. It was floated by Peter Horrocks, head of television news, a man who from his demeanour is powerful, intellectual and an impeccable trend spotter.

Simply put (and he describes it in more complex terms) Horrocks believes the BBC needs to bring in voices and campaigners hitherto kept out of the corporation’s respectable broadcasting studios. This means, he says, a move away from the ‘no-platform’ posturings of student politics. On this I agree with him. But when he argues the BNP or extremist Muslim campaigners can be allowed to make their case, with robust interviewers ensuring ‘balance’ my blood freezes. The BBC was never a coliseum, a bloody arena for a fight to the death. That is already what I feel it sees itself as. And it wants more extreme action.

For the first time ever, I resent paying the licence fee because the BBC is not fulfilling its public service role with the integrity it always had.

Broadcasts impact on lives, on perceptions, on the sense of security of vulnerable citizens. Take one example. Day after day, the BBC arranges for an anti-immigration and anti-asylum mood to grow, which it has done over three years. Named asylum seekers are not put up to make their cases – they are always numbers; no equivalence exists between pro and anti immigration views.

A profoundly illiberal agenda is presented by respected presenters. And people like me get more afraid of the future. Some years ago Norman Tebbit, on the Today programme, told me I could never be British. Maybe he was right and I should have emigrated when I could have, before I had to witness the fall from grace of my BBC.

Yasmin Alibhai-Brown is a columnist, author and broadcaster

Meeting with Tariq Ali and Lindsay German / Audio

Wednesday, May 16th, 2007

Audio of the meeting with Tariq Ali and Lindsay German (10 May 2007):

The audio has been recorded and edited by Julian Bohne.

TARIQ ALI: Afghanistan - a good war or another Iraq?

Tuesday, May 1st, 2007

PUBLIC MEETING
Afghanistan: a “good” war or another Iraq?

Thursday May 10, 7pm

Speakers:
TARIQ ALI
, author
A BBC JOURNALIST

City University (map)
Lecture theatre CM507
via main entrance, Northampton Square
London EC1

Angel/Old Street/Farringdon/Barbican tube stations

All welcome!

Organised by Media Workers Against the war
www.mwaw.net
tel 07801 789 297

Afghan government punishes Afghans for journalists’ release

Thursday, March 29th, 2007

Helping an Italian journalist to be released can be a dangerous business.

Emergency, an Italian humanitarian organisation, played a key role in the liberation of the Italian journalist Daniele Mastrogiacomo, who was kidnapped in Afghanistan on March 6th and released on the 18th. Three days later, Emergency says, Rahmatullah Hanefi, one of their staff was arrested by the Afghan security service and may be being tortured.

The Italian media always react strongly against kidnapping of Italian citizens, but this time the reaction was enormous. First, Mastrogiacomo was a reporter of the second most important Italian newspaper, La Repubblica. The newspaper waged a strong campaign to free him, supported across the media.

Second, Prodi’s government collapsed some weeks ago because the upper chamber couldn’t agree to back Italy’s military presence in Afghanistan. (The government was eventually re-established and the mission approved a few days ago).

Last but not least, the Taliban was convinced that Mastrogiacomo had been collaborating with western intelligence services. The Taliban said they found a satellite mobile phone and a laser hidden in a shampoo bottle, both provided by western intelligence services. That was enough for them to execute Mastrogiacomo’s driver — and for Italians to fear that Mastrogiacomo was the next on the list.

Mr Matrogiacomo was released in exchange for five Taliban prisoners, including the brother of the top Taliban military commander Mullah Dadullah. NATO allies raised concerns about the deal, but it is hard to believe that Taliban prisoners could be released without the authorization of NATO forces.

However, there was friction between Emergency and the NATO/Afghan forces, and on March 20 the Afghan government decided to arrest Mr Hanefi, the Afghan manager of Emergency’s hospital in Lashkargah. (Emergency has run hospitals in Afghanistan since before the NATO forces arrived.)

Indeed, Emergency played an important role, through its contacts, in freeing Mr Mastrogiacomo, who was eventually handed over to the organisation. Emergency says it has information that Mr Hanefi is being tortured.

Please read the petition and sign the petition for Hanefi’s release here. It can be signed by clicking at the end of this page, under “subscribe”.

UK Anti-War Protests: The Voice of the Common People

Saturday, March 24th, 2007

Fatima Najm of Arab News submitted this excellent report from the Feb 24 anti-war demo in London:

Jackie Chase cannot understand why Britain’s foreign policy has failed to reflect the anti-war sentiment swelling around her during a peace rally in Trafalgar Square recently. The music teacher is one of tens of thousands of protesters who poured into the square, holding placards demanding everything from Blair’s resignation, a withdrawal of troops from Iraq and Afghanistan, to an end to Britain’s nuclear weapons program. They also voiced fears over a possible confrontation with Iran.
Whatever their gripe with the government, most protesters agreed on two things: They want Blair to stop war mongering, and they want the people of the Middle East to know they care.

Chase walked through the march in an orange jumpsuit with a black hood over her head chained to several campaigners, to protest the illegal detention of prisoners at Guantanamo Bay.

She started the “Save Omar Deghayes” campaign in the hope that British authorities would not condemn an innocent man to the torture and abuse Deghayes has allegedly been subjected to during his time in prison.

Deghayes was a Brighton resident who went to Afghanistan hoping to export dry fruit to wholesalers in the United Kingdom. By the time the Americans began to bomb the country, Deghayes had settled in, and married an Afghani girl. When the situation worsened, he tried to flee across the border to Pakistan to get a British visa for his bride. He was captured in Lahore, taken back to Afghanistan, held at Bagram airbase, and labeled an “Enemy Combatant.”

Five years later, he is one of many “suspects” being held by US authorities at Guantanamo Bay on secret evidence that is presented only to “Combatant Status Review Tribunals.” That evidence is not subject to legal, public or independent scrutiny and is often based only on speculation.

Chase and several Brighton residents said they were there to “put a stop to the atrocities committed in the name of keeping us safe.”

Deghayes’ family believes his predicament may be a case of mistaken identity. A photograph of a man named Omar Deghayes from a Chechen training camp, bearing no resemblance to the dry-fruit vendor Deghayes, was aired on Spanish television on the FBI’s most wanted list. Experts have testified since then that the only thing dry fruit vendor Deghayes shares with the man in the photograph is his name.

“But Omar is still in prison and we know he has been beaten, blinded, his arm broken. We are very concerned for his mental well being and frankly I don’t think the British government can handle the embarrassment of bringing him home now after five years of this abuse, what’s left of him?” said Chase, whose 17-year-old son Sam was also marching to protest illegal military action in Iraq and in Afghanistan.

“What frightens me is our ability to switch off from suffering,” said Chase, “I know people will watch us on the news and say, ‘they look annoyed about something,’ change the channel, and go back to enjoying their warm meal and Ikea furniture.”

According to him, anti-terror legislation, introduced after 9/11 to help the West combat an abstract enemy, has turned a system of representation into a system of top-down government.

“(George Orwell’s) 1984 scenario is not far when you can send a man to prison without evidence, we are completely controlled and all of us in Britain are complicit in making a democracy into a system where we no longer have representation. The government does what it wants,” said Sam, who is outraged that Blair took his country to war and that Blair will let innocent men remain in Guantanamo Bay.

Redoune Zghizhe, a friend of the Deghayes family who works in the food and beverage department of a hotel, is still bemused over his friend’s detention.

“He was just a business man. It is illegal, it is wrong to imprison a man who saw a business opportunity for export and sent to find work abroad, he was just in the wrong place at the wrong time, but this is the world today,” Zghizhe said.

As they walked through cordoned-off streets, tourists snapped photos, while onlookers sometimes clapped, sometimes gawked and jeered at them. They walked on, unconcerned. The campaigners are determined that if they fail to find justice in a court of law, they will continue to seek redress in a court of public opinion.

Keegan, who works for website www.onegreenearth.com said, “We are against this illegal war, all war is unjust, we want it to stop.”

They came out because they find “the mainstream media is not doing its job so it’s up to every individual to draw attention to the injustice of war.”

On the outskirts of the congregation, twenty young demonstrators danced incessantly to music coming from a makeshift sound system.

Ben Gray, who works in the music industry, thinks he has found the ultimate way to get that very message across.

He decided to “sidestep mainstream media and give all these protesters a concrete way to have their voice heard,” by releasing a single called “War what is it good for.” Gray hopes Tony Blair will find it humiliating and is appealing for residents of Britain to text peace1 to 78789 to get it into the charts.

Gray is one of a growing number of Britons enraged that Blair took his country to war over “a pack of lies.” And he is annoyed with the media for not exposing those lies.

“I saw masses of people march in 2003, they were against the war then, and they are against it now, but the government doesn’t listen,” he said. “But if the single makes it into the charts everyone will have to listen. Otherwise we are just preaching to the converted.”

Gray realized that new legislation allowing downloaded songs to enter the charts without having to physically release a single meant they could pull off “a musical referendum.”

“From January downloads can propel singles into the charts and the media, the police, the government can distort the numbers of protesters who show up – when you attend you know there were a lot more than gets reported the next day – but no one can deny the numbers when people are buying the single, and getting Tony Blair into the charts,” he said.

Gray finds delicious irony in the fact that “Blair called his college band “Ugly Rumors,” and now he’s known for spreading ugly rumors,” which is why the music video is available on a site called – you guessed it – www.uglyrumours.com.

“We have been duped and we must resist, and we will not be fooled into an act of aggression with Iran,” said Gray. “I was never an activist, but we all have to speak up now. We have all been betrayed.”

[Written for http://www.arabnews.com]

Media briefing: Islamic law - myth and reality

Tuesday, March 20th, 2007

Media briefing: Islamic law - myth and reality

With Islam specialist Paul Grieve,
atheist and author: “A Brief Guide to Islam” (2006)

Islamic law has become a crude shorthand in the British media for everything supposedly “barbaric”, “sexist” and “backward” about Islam. Here’s you chance to ask the questions about Sharia you always wanted to ask.

Monday April 2
6.30pm

National Union of Journalists
Gray’s Inn Road
London WC1X

All welcome!