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ANKARA: A BIA Approach To Rights Reporting

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  • ANKARA: A BIA Approach To Rights Reporting

    A BIA APPROACH TO RIGHTS REPORTING
    Emine Ozcan-Gokce Gunduc

    BIA
    Jan 22 2008
    Turkey

    BIA launches a four volume series on rights reporting. Introduced
    to media professionals in the weekend the series is the outcome of
    training workshops for journalists and rights activists and focuses
    on a rights approach to reporting.

    As part of its "Media Freedom and Independent Journalism Monitoring
    and News Network (BIA)" project, the IPS Communication Foundation
    releases four new books on rights journalism. The books, aimed at a
    readership of journalists and rights activists, are a result of 23
    media training workshops run by IPS between 2004 and 2005.

    A total of 860 journalists and rights activists, 348 of them women,
    512 men, had taken part in these educational workshops. Assistant
    Professor Dr. Sevda Alankus, Dean of the Eastern Mediterranean
    University's Communications Faculty, acted as editor and training
    advisor for the series of books.

    A focus on rights The four books are titled "Human Rights Journalism",
    "Journalism Focusing on Women's Rights", "Journalism Focusing on
    Childre's Rights" and "Rights Organisations: Becoming Visible in
    the Media."

    At the weekend, BIA invited journalists, lawyers, academics and
    activists to a breakfast in order to launch the series of books.

    Making the invisible visible BIA coordinator Ertugrul Kurkcu spoke
    about the progress in the reporting on the freedom of expression
    and rights monitoring since the inception of the project. He also
    discussed the Independent Media Forum organised at the end of 2006,
    saying: "We have the possibility to see what others cannot see."

    He added, "Even if the state boasts that the number of imprisoned
    journalists has decreased, we started 2007 with the murder, with the
    execution of Hrant Dink," and invited those at the breakfast to join
    the commemoration event for the murdered Turkish-Armenian journalist
    on that day.

    A contribution to human rights literature Assistant Professor Dr. Sevda
    Alankus spoke about the fact that with this project academics had
    become part of "real life". "We gathered examples of how journalism
    could be done better."

    Describing BIA as a "special experience", Alankus added that reporting
    on rights also meant considering rights violations. The books,
    she said, represented a contribution to the literature focusing on
    human rights.

    She added that in the current atmosphere of conflict and social
    tension, BIA was the first to express the concept of "peace
    journalism"; it was heartening that the term had been adopted by the
    mainstream media, too.

    Bianet dissolves lines Assistant Professor Dr. Serdar Degirmencioglu
    said that in journalism there were often rigid lines between areas of
    interest. For instance, someone working on children's rights might
    have problems finding a newspaper or television channel interested
    in their work. However, bianet represented a forum where these lines
    had been dissolved, and the newly-published books were a result of
    this mentality.

    Lawyer Hulya Gulbahar, president of the Association for Supporting
    and Educating Women Candidates (KADER), praised the fact that bianet
    had introduced women's rights journalism to dozens of female and male
    journalists of regional media institutions through their educational
    workshops.

    "If the media does not try to look at issues from a woman's
    perspective, then it is turned into a mechanism against women. Bianet
    has played an important role in the formation of the Women's Media
    Monitoring Group. Indeed, bianet's educational workshops, which have
    been the basis fort he books, have been important for creating ethical
    rules for the media."

    Journalists inadvertently violate rights and need to be educated
    Journalist Tugrul Eryilmaz emphasised the importance of rights
    journalism, pointing out that even the most well-meaning journalistst
    could inadvertently violate rights. Thus, bianet was taking an
    important step forward. He called on all people working in the media
    to acquire the books and read them.

    Journalist Ipek Calislar described bianet's approach as an invitation
    to everyone to change themselves first. "We began to understand
    together that by making news we could also commit crimes. Some of us
    commit many, some of us few crimes. Focusing on this has widened all
    of our horizons and this needs to be continued." (EZO-GG/TK/AG)
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