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By Any Means: The LATimes And Kurdish Coverage

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  • By Any Means: The LATimes And Kurdish Coverage

    BY ANY MEANS: THE LATIMES AND KURDISH COVERAGE
    By Garen Yegparian

    http://www.asbarez.com/78059/la-times-k urdish-coverage/
    Mar 8th, 2010

    In this third of what started as a three part series on LATimes
    coverage of interest to Armenians, I'll address some Kurdish-topic
    patterns I noticed over the past two-plus years.

    Arguably, the Kurds have fared best among the peoples of Armenia's
    neighbors. Certainly, they had more coverage, at least in terms
    of number of pieces, than anyone else, other than possibly Iran
    (I have not tracked the latter). But, those pieces overwhelmingly
    involved conflict. Whether it was Turkey attacking the PKK, the PKK
    responding, the ramifications of these in Iraq and southern Kurdistan,
    or the political growth pains of the federal structure in Iraq as it
    impacts the Kurds- coverage stemmed from blood or fierce politics.

    Even those stories not directly involving Iraq-Kurd and Turkey-PKK
    issues were conflictual, e.g. Kurdish protests or persecution in
    Turkey, Kurds denying responsibility for a bombing, and murders
    attributed to a "tribal vendetta" in Kurd-inhabited parts of Turkey.

    Plus, the one editorial regarding Turkish-PKK interactions favored
    Turkey. There is no coverage of Turkey's abuses of Kurds' human
    rights, no "picture" of daily life in Turkish occupied Armenia and
    Kurdistan. There is the occasional piece about or reference to (in
    coverage not specifically about the Kurds) "look at the progress in
    northern Iraq". Basically, the paper seems to be toeing the State
    Department's line. No one would call the LATimes pro-Kurdish.

    These establishment-based and "if it bleeds it leads" biases do a
    disservice to readers. For Armenians, it is, I suppose better than
    nothing that some trickle of information about our "cousins" intrudes
    upon our awareness to supplement what the Armenian media provides.

    But this pathetic coverage of the largest stateless nation on the
    planet leads to perpetual uninformedness of Kurdish reality among U.S.

    citizens (as I have no doubt other major newspapers are similarly
    deficient), in turn leading to less than optimal Kurdish policy in
    the State Department.

    The Kurdish Question, like the Armenian, is key to peace in the Middle
    East. Palestine-Israel may be the hottest issue, but its resolution
    will not usher in the hoped for peace in the area. If anything, with
    that gone, the opportunities for mischief through the abuse of Kurds'
    and Armenians' fundamental rights and manipulation by some powers of
    their liberation movements, will expand.

    It behooves us, as we develop and implement a media strategy, to
    include the Kurdish perspective on our shared homeland.
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