Israel's Media Watch (IMW)
Update Report #26
- January 7, 2000
-
Help needed
- IMW news
-
The
High Court of Justice (Bagatz) instructed the State
prosecutor's Office to provide IMW with the evidence the
Eyal swearing-in ceremony
-Halaby May Be Indicted
-
Words of Wisdom
- Media News
-
In
Syria's tow By David Bar-Illan
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Likud slams media silence on Nava Barak's travels By David Zev Harris
Reminder!
You may hear Rami Sadan and Yisrael Medad discussing
media issues on their popular radio program "Chofesh
HaShidur" (The Freedom of Broadcasting) on Arutz 7,
Sunday mornings live! between 8-9AM.
Help Needed:-
IMW will be reviewing and researching the electronic
media performance beginning from December 8, 1999 when
the news of the reconvening of Syrian-Israeli talks broke.
If any of the list members can draw our attention to
media ethics infractions such as unbalanced number of
guests on interview programs, personal opinion statements
by broadcasters, use of loaded terms or phrases,
unnecessary aggressive questioning or ridicule, et al.,
we would appreciate this.
IMW needs monitors, listeners and recorders to follow the
Golan/Syrian Negotiation coverage. If you can
commit yourself to at least one program, call the office
or e-mail a reply.
IMW
News
- IMW won a major legal victory on Thursday,
January 6, 2000 when the High Court of Justice (Bagatz)
instructed the State prosecutor's Office to provide IMW
with the evidence from the police investigation into the
charges of the broadcasting in 1995 of an inauthentic
media event, suspected as staged.
The IMW petition demanded that the Court reverse the
decision to close the file due to lack of evidence.
IMW's counsel, Yoram Sheftel, surprised the court with
partial transcripts from the police investigation,
independently obtained. The Court, headed by
Michael Cheshin, allowed the State Prosecution 15 days to
fulfill the demand for providing the evidence, including
the unedited, original film that was shot the evening of
the event. The partial evidence clearly indicates
that the IBA TV reporter, Eitan Oren, expressed a desire
to see the group act provocatively and virtually "produced"
the event.
Following another 15 day period in which the State
Prosecution is to
respond to the material, a new date will be set.
- HALABY MAY BE
INDICTED - Arutz 7, January 2, 2000
The police recommend that Rafik Halaby, news director of
the Israel
Broadcasting Authority's Channel One television station,
be indicted for bribery and breach of trust. He is
suspected of helping the Shas party in two electoral
campaigns, in return for which Shas leader Aryeh Deri
allegedly acted to have him appointed to his current post.
Halaby is alleged to have translated several cassettes
from Arabic into Hebrew, and to have arranged parlor
meetings for Shas in the Druze community of which he is a
member. Halaby admits to having translated the
cassettes, but says that this is an act of mistaken
judgement for which he should face internal disciplinary
proceedings and not criminal charges.
Arutz-7's Ron Meir interviewed Israel Media Watch
director Yisrael Medad, who has been closely following
the story for months. The interview can be heard at
www.a7.org/engclips/020100/medad-halaby.ram
.
Note: IMW demanded of Gil Samsonov, IBA Chairman
and of Edna Arbel, State Prosecutor, that Halaby be
suspended immediately. A letter to Attorney-General
Rubinstein last July and two more follow-ups in November
have gone ignored except for a laconic note that the
matter is under review.
Words
of Wisdom -
"Television is democracy at its
ugliest".
Paddy Chayefsky
Media
News
An excerpt from
EYE ON THE MEDIA:
In Syria's tow
By
David Bar-Illan
Jerusalem Post, December 31, 1999
...What Yediot Aharonot did last Friday
was probably a first in Israel. The whole front page and
the following two pages, plus a continuation on an inside
page of the newspaper - which on Friday appears as a
broadsheet - were devoted almost exclusively to a picture
story by reporter Boaz Bismout about his three-day visit
to Damascus.
Had the combined forces of the Syrian ministries of
Foreign Affairs and Tourism planned a propaganda brochure
with which to sell the current Syrian peace campaign,
they could not have done a better job.
According to Bismout, Syria's streets may not boast the
latest-model cars, and its university students may be 10
years behind the times in campus fashions. But otherwise
Damascus is the closest thing to Shangri-la.
It is a meticulously orderly and disciplined city...Everyone
Bismout met - from soldiers to students to hotel
employees to businessmen to an anonymous Foreign Office
official - is waiting with bated breath to welcome rich
Israeli tourists to Damascus. And they are all looking
forward to their own shopping expeditions in Tel Aviv.
"It will be like Europe here, if you only return the
Golan," they say with heartwarming conviction...
A TOTALITARIAN country? Not at all, asserts Bismout.
Syria is quite free. Why, Syrian papers boldly reported
the apprehension of the alleged serial rapist in Tel Aviv.
And Bismout's phone calls to Paris were never
disconnected, even when he mentioned his editor's name.
And satellite dishes, though officially illegal, can be
seen on every roof.
If this all sounds painfully familiar, it is because the
story could have been a copy of similar tales, with
variations to suit local circumstances, about the Soviet
Union, Cuba, China, Franco's Spain and other happy lands.
Such stories were also published about Egypt circa 1980,
Iraq in early 1990, and Gaza and Jericho in 1994.
...A few journalists are then allowed to visit and report
what they see and hear. And since no one is more eager
than Western journalists to herald the budding signs of
utopian peace after years of strife and threats of war,
the visit usually results in the kind of report Bismout
turned in. In the euphoria of "peace at last,"
the unspeakable brutality of the regime is relegated to
oblivion, and anyone who dares mention it is branded a
hopeless warmonger.
In this case, Yediot was not only a willing collaborator
in the charade - it was disingenuous in the way it
presented it. It billed Bismout as "Yediot Aharonot's
emissary reporting on three days in Damascus,"
imparting the impression he was there as a Yediot
correspondent. Thus misled, New York Times columnist Tom
Friedman complimented Syrian President Hafez Assad for
the gesture. "To his credit," he wrote this
week, "Mr. Assad allowed a reporter from Israel's
largest newspaper, Yediot, to visit Damascus last week."
But Bismout traveled to Damascus on his French passport,
after getting his Syrian visa in Paris. At no time did he
present himself as an Israeli, either to Syrian officials
in Paris or to the plain Syrians he met in Damascus. The
most he revealed about himself, he says, is that he is
Jewish.
If there is a silver lining in the publication of such a
transparent propaganda exercise, it is in the part about
the proliferation of satellite dishes. If true, this may
prove the beginning of the end of the dictatorship. It
was access to Western news and communications that helped
effect the collapse of Soviet totalitarianism. It may do
the same in the Middle East. "
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