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Haigazian: Arab press post Sept. 11 Terrorist Attacks

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  • Haigazian: Arab press post Sept. 11 Terrorist Attacks

    March 31, 2004
    CONTACT : Loucia Isaac Seropian
    Phone: 961-1-353010 Ext.: 365
    Email: [email protected]

    Haigazian University-Public Relations Office
    PO Box: 11-1748Beirut, Lebanon


    Media expert puts US, Arab press in post-Sept. 11 focus
    Lecture juxtaposes profit motive with

    By Ara Alain Arzoumanian
    Special to The Daily Star
    Tuesday, March 30, 2004

    BEIRUT: The Arab world, which has decried the lack of coverage by the US
    and European Union media in the past, found itself in the spotlight
    following the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks - although mostly in a slanted and
    pejorative manner - says Nichan Havandjian, journalism department
    chairperson at California Polytechnic State University.

    "It should be clear to everyone that the context of the media in the US and
    how it operates is in a totally different manner than that in Lebanon and
    the Arab world," Havandjian said during a lecture titled US Media and Arabs
    in Post-Sept. 11 America, at Haigazian University in Beirut last week.

    "All media in the US are first and foremost considered commercial
    enterprises whose main goal is to achieve a financial profit. In contrast,
    virtually all the press in the Arab world is heavily subsidized."

    Havandjian said that the US media are owned by conglomerates with no
    governmental subsidies or bailouts and whose main concern remains healthy
    profits. A 25 percent profit margin is expected and certain editors leave
    when the financial targets are not achieved.

    The US consumer market of 290 million people has some 457 daily newspapers,
    6,700 weeklies, 1,800 TV stations and 14,000 radio stations.

    Voice of America, a radio station established after World War II, and the
    all new Al-Hurra TV, with an initial budget of $62 million, are the only
    government funded media aimed at the international public. They do not
    broadcast domestically, as US legislation prohibits the use of government
    funds for public broadcasts.

    "Media in the US aim basically to inform and entertain, with lots of fluff,
    focusing on local politics and news, and definitely not the Middle East,"
    explained Havandjian.

    "Taxes, unemployment, social security and safety within America's borders
    are US citizens' main concerns. How to lose 10 pounds in 3 days or live to
    be 121 years old attract more attention than what is happening in our part
    of the world," he said.

    According to Havandjian, there are only about 600,000 to 700,000 regular
    daily CNN viewers in the US, representing some 0.002 percent of the
    population. The only time a higher number of viewers tune in CNN is when
    there is news of terrorist acts, threats on US soil or when high-profile
    individuals, like O. J. Simpson and his trial developments, are aired.

    Foreign news is offered mainly in California and New Mexico and is
    comprised mostly of excerpts from the Associated Press, Reuters, Agence
    France Presse and Itar Tass, he said. This is the only window of the world
    offered to the American public. It's not that the information is not
    available - one just has to look for it.

    The major networks, following an international incident in a foreign land
    where have no correspondents present, will hastily dispatch someone to
    cover the event, said Havandjian. This person is expected, within the time
    frame of his flight, to become an expert on the destination country and its
    internal workings. As such, he called such reporting at best shallow and
    highly erroneous.

    "People must also rid themselves of misconceptions like all CNN reporters
    are CIA or FBI agents," said Havandjian. "Maybe there are handfuls among
    the hundreds of correspondents but definitely not the whole staff."

    Havandjian went on to describe how certain media in the US were blatantly
    biased against Arabs and Palestinians. Fox News, owned by Rupert Murdoch,
    known for his conservative and anti-Arab stance, has refered to suicide
    bombings as homicide bombings. The New York Post, declaring a state of war,
    called Arabs the enemy within. The Washington Times, run by Reverend Moon,
    has kept up the idea that, according to reliable sources, weapons of mass
    destruction are in Syria.

    Hamas founder Sheikh Yassin's death has been described as "another one
    bites the dust." The New York Post has even run a cartoon of Abdel-Aziz
    al-Rantissi, the successor to Ahmed Yassin, it's spiritual leader -
    choosing a coffin in a mortuary as his first decision.

    "But not all is negative," said Havandjian. "The New York Times and The LA
    Times have been boycotted by Jewish groups for their impartial reporting of
    the news. Another unbiased newspaper, The Christian Science Monitor, is one
    of the top 10 dailies in the country."

    Havandjian recounted how, following Sept. 11, an EU diplomat told the
    Americans to "Get on with it." After all, the loss of 4,000 lives paled in
    comparison to the millions dying around the world. What everyone failed to
    comprehend was that this was the first incident since Pearl Harbor where
    the US was attacked on its own soil and it left a scar on the American
    psyche.

    What made matters worse was that it was carried out by individuals who had
    received shelter in the US. The twin towers, symbols of US prosperity and
    free enterprise were obliterated. The United States suddenly found itself
    governed by the Patriot Act, glorifying a new fortress America.

    "But the backlash also had its positive sides," explained Havandjian. "Arab
    Americans suddenly became aware of their roots and never-seen or - heard of
    Arab art and poetry came under the spotlight.

    "And curiously it was the next-door American who first and foremost stood
    in defense of his Arab neighbor when things got sour."

    According to Havandjian, it is the Arab youth who are most angry with the
    United States.

    "To counter this trend successfully, a deep understanding of the American
    psyche is necessary," said Havandjian.

    "Americans love winners and hate losers. And unfortunately, to date, the
    Arabs have portrayed themselves as losers, attacking prosperity because
    they are unable to achieve it themselves.

    "Arabs must also take into consideration the opinion of about 70 million
    fundamental Christians based mostly in the southern USA, George W. Bush's
    core constituency, who sometimes are more zealous in backing Israel than
    Jews and Israelites," he added.

    Havandjian also blamed the Arabs for the current situation. When the Arab
    press reports that thousands of Iraqis are dying daily, instead of a few
    dozen, they automatically lose credibility. And the fact that the Syrian
    ambassador stood alone, with the other couple of dozen Arab ambassadors
    conspicuously absent, to protest the Syria Accountability Act, showed the
    extent of disunity among the Arabs.

    "The solution remains in improving the Arab image by encouraging future
    Arab journalists and communications officers through scholarships," said
    Havandjian.

    "Sadly, last year only one such scholarship was granted.

    "Editors of major regional papers in the US, like those in Kansas or
    Oregon, should be invited to Arab countries and given free access to anyone
    they wish to meet. These people have the power to shift the Americans'
    image of Arabs as they enjoy a huge credibility among their fellow
    citizens," concluded Havandjian.

    "Of course not all their reporting would be positive, given the actual real
    situation on the ground, but at least the positive aspects will gain
    credibility among the US public."

    END
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