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 Aljazeera TV Coverage:  The Revolution Will Be Televised, But  Also 
	Manipulated  By Ramzy Baroud  Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, January 18, 2012 
 In the final days of the Libyan conflict, as NATO conducted a 
	nonstop bombing campaign, an Aljazeera Arabic television correspondent’s 
	actions raised more than eyebrows. They also raised serious questions 
	regarding the journalistic responsibility of Arab media – or in fact any 
	media - during times of conflict.
 
 Using a handheld transceiver, the 
	journalist aired live communication between a Libyan commander and his 
	troops in a Tripoli neighborhood targeted by a massive air assault. Millions 
	of people listened, as surely did NATO military intelligence, to sensitive 
	information disclosed by an overpowered, largely defeated army. The 
	Doha-based news anchor sought further elaboration, and the reporter readily 
	provided all the details he knew.
 
 Did Abdul Adhim 
	Mohammed, a journalist reputed for his gutsy reports from Iraq’s Fallujah, 
	violate the rules of journalism by transmitting information that could aid 
	one party against another, and worse, cost human lives?
 
 While there 
	are few doubts about the impressive legacy of Aljazeera – and the valuable 
	individual contributions of many of its reporters – urgent questions need to 
	be asked regarding its current coverage of the so-called Arab Spring that 
	began in December 2010.
 
 Some of us have warned against the 
	temptation of a one-narrative-fits-all style of reporting. A non-violent 
	popular uprising is fundamentally different from an armed rebellion, and a 
	home-grown peaceful Tahrir Square revolution is different from NATO-Arab 
	military and political campaigns aimed at settling old scores and fomenting 
	sectarian conflict (as in Libya and now Syria).
 
 Aljazeera coverage 
	of the Egyptian revolution was, for the most part, impeccable. It was the 
	type of coverage that reflected the revolutionary fervor felt throughout the 
	country. Even when the former regime of Hosni Mubarak pulled the plug on 
	Aljazeera coverage, it somehow found a way to transmit the country’s mood 
	with impressive clarity.
 
 Yet, despite the fact that some Arab 
	uprisings are inherently more complex than others (because some societies 
	embody a more involved sectarian makeup, for example), Aljazeera news 
	anchors continue to jump from one country to the other, as if addressing 
	different points of the exact same topic. In the channel’s coverage of 
	Libya, NATO’s unwarranted bombing campaign received little reporting. The 
	targeting of black Africans (covered by some Western and African media) 
	earned little airtime at Aljazeera Arabic. Ever-available guests were often 
	immediately dispatched to dismiss any reports of maltreatment of captured 
	soldiers accused of being ‘loyal to Muammar al-Qaddafi’. Aljazeera had 
	indeed striven to present a perfect scenario of a perfect revolution. Now 
	that the sentimentalization of the revolution is fading out, a harsh new 
	reality is setting in, one that encompasses numerous arms groups, infighting 
	and Western countries ready to share the spoils.
 
 Aljazeera’s 
	priority has now shifted from Libya to Syria, a country that has been on 
	Washington’s radar for many years and long irked Israel for its support of 
	Lebanese and Palestinian resistance factions.
 
 From a political and 
	humanitarian viewpoint, there is no denial that Syria is in need of 
	fundamental political reforms. More, the blatant violence employed against 
	the uprising was simply indefensible. However, unlike what Aljazeera Arabic 
	and other media may claim on an hourly basis, there is more to Syria than a 
	brutal ‘Alawite regime’ and a rebelling nation that never ceases to demand 
	‘international intervention’. There is also the reality of ill-intentioned 
	parties seeking their own objectives, such as further isolating Iran, 
	strengthening allies in Lebanon, weakening Damascus-based Palestinian 
	factions, and aiding US allies in rearranging the entire power-paradigm in 
	the region.
 
 One would argue that whatever ambitions some small Arab 
	country may have, these should not be pursued at the expense of the Syrian 
	people, who are seeking real democracy in a sovereign country free from 
	meddling, armed militias and unexplained car bombs. The fact is, insecurity 
	and political uncertainty will be the future of Syria if a political 
	settlement is not achieved between the government – which must end its 
	violent crackdowns on pro-democracy protests – and a truly patriotic 
	opposition that doesn’t call for foreign intervention or ‘no-fly-zones’. The 
	Iraq no-fly-zone in 1991 and the Libya no-fly-zone in 2011 were mere 
	prologues to military actions that devastated both countries.  There is 
	little justification in repeating this scenario; the Syrian people did not 
	rise merely to see their country being destroyed.
 
 In January 5, a 
	massive blast killed 26 people in Damascus, exactly two weeks after twin 
	bombings killed 44. Between the two bombings, hundreds of Syrians were 
	reportedly killed and wounded in the armed conflict involving the Free 
	Syrian Army. Considering the large and porous border areas between Syria and 
	Iraq, Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan, and the contentious border area with the 
	occupied Golan Heights (illegally annexed by Israel), one cannot dismiss the 
	possibility that Syria has been infiltrated on many fronts. But this also 
	goes unreported.
 
 While one lacks sympathy for any regime that 
	brutally murders innocent people, journalists are also accountable to both 
	balance and humanitarian standards. They cannot completely dismiss one party 
	and embrace another. Aljazeera Arabic channel has done just that. It has 
	failed to maintain its independence, and is growingly covering the upheaval 
	in the Arab world from the narrow political prism of its host country.
 
 In Aljazeera’s early days in the mid and late 1990s, the channel took on 
	taboo subjects and proudly challenged the status quo. This continued with 
	Aljazeera’s coverage of Afghanistan and the Iraq war, when mainstream 
	western media were disowning their own proclaimed standards of objectivity 
	and treating Iraqis like dispensable beings underserving of even a body 
	count.
 
 In recent months, however, Aljazeera has begun to change 
	course. It has deviated from its journalistic responsibilities in Libya, and 
	is now completely losing the plot with Syria.
 
 The channel is in 
	urgent need to revisit its own code of ethics, and to fulfill its promise of 
	treating its audience “with due respect and address every issue or story 
	with due attention to present a clear, factual and accurate picture.” Yes, 
	perhaps the Syrian regime should be changed, and perhaps an armed rebellion 
	in Syria will eventually overtake the non-violent uprising. But the outcome 
	is not for me, Aljazeera, The New York Times or any other journalist or 
	publication to decide. The revolution belongs to the Syrian people alone, 
	and only they can determine where it leads.
 
 - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) 
	is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of 
	PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: 
	Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press, London).
 
 
 
 
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