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American And Turkish Journalism -- A Comparison

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  • American And Turkish Journalism -- A Comparison

    AMERICAN AND TURKISH JOURNALISM -- A COMPARISON

    NPR.org
    April 6 2006

    NPR.org, April 5, 2006 · Hundreds of foreign journalists visit the
    United States each year at the invitation of the State Department.

    They visit a variety of newsrooms, meet their American counterparts
    and see for themselves how our journalism works in Washington, D.C.,
    and in other parts of the country.

    Last week, five American journalists and academics (including me),
    were invited to return the favor by going to Turkey to meet with
    journalists in Istanbul and Ankara. The Turkish journalists we met
    came from all sides of the political and media spectrum - everything
    from a pro-government Islamist daily called Yeni Safak to a very
    familiar-looking all-news television channel known as CNN Turk.

    Twenty-Eight National Newspapers!

    The Turkish media scene is lively and crowded. There are 28 national
    daily newspapers in Turkey, and more than a dozen national television
    stations. There are also hundreds of local newspapers and radio
    stations. Almost all are owned by a few conglomerates. There is also
    a national public broadcaster in both radio and television known as
    TRT, which is completely funded by the Turkish government.

    The conversations with these often-scrappy journalists were
    tremendously frank and wide-ranging. Discussions usually touched
    on the complicated new relationship that Turkish journalists now
    must have with the Turkish government -- a government described as
    "moderate Islamic." Relations between journalists and the government
    are often fraught with political tensions about government policies.

    Article 301

    That's partly because of a recent amendment to the Turkish penal
    code that was passed in December. It's called Article 301, and it
    now makes it a crime punishable by prison to offend "Turkishness,"
    a euphemism for the icons of the Turkish state as well as the policies
    of the government.

    For example, any public discussion of the fate of Turkey's Armenian
    community during World War I could be considered an offense against
    "Turkishness." Many in Turkey consider the deaths of up to 1.5
    million Armenians to be the first Holocaust in modern times. Some
    Turkish journalists are raising the issue, saying that Turkey needs
    to openly confront this issue in its history, but writing about this
    in Turkish newspapers is not without some risk. Many Turks, especially
    in government, consider that number to be highly exaggerated. They say
    that whatever deaths occurred were the result of wartime inadvertence,
    not a systematic policy of genocide.

    Article 301 can also affect any vigorous satire (and there is a lot of
    it around) about the government. No one is sure where the boundaries
    are. As a result, state prosecutors have applied the new law in
    different ways, much to the confusion of the media, which is still
    assessing what constitutes "offending Turkishness." Some important
    Turkish writers have been charged under Article 301 including Orhan
    Pamuk, whose works are widely known and respected abroad.

    Free Speech and Free Press

    Many of the journalists we met expressed hope that their American
    counterparts would be more aware of the threats to free speech and
    a free press in Turkey.

    At the same time, the Turkish journalists were well aware of the
    issues surrounding freedom of the press in the United States. We were
    frequently asked whether the possible trial of Lewis Libby, Vice
    President Dick Cheney's advisor is - like Article 301 in Turkey -
    an attempt to intimidate the American media into revealing its sources.

    We were also asked how Americans view an event of enormous
    significance to Turks but little known in the United States. In July
    2003, Turkish Special Forces in Iraq were mistakenly identified as
    insurgents. American and Iraqi forces placed hoods over the heads
    of the captured Turks. That act caused (and still evokes) enormous
    national upset. While no one was killed, many Turks felt humiliated
    that their American ally could do this. The offense to Turkish national
    pride still smarts. Worse yet from the Turkish point of view, this
    story got little notice in the U.S. media at the time, and it is
    likely that few people in the United States can recall it today.

    The War in Iraq

    Overriding all discussions about press freedoms and U.S.-Turkish
    relations is, of course, the war in Iraq.

    Most serious news organizations in Turkey have full-time reporters
    based in Baghdad and especially in Kurdish Iraq, which borders on
    an area of Turkey with a large Kurdish community. Within Turkey,
    there are many cultural and political tensions between Turks and Kurds.

    Many Turkish journalists expressed their concern that the U.S.-led war
    will undoubtedly encourage Kurdish separatism in Iraq and possibly
    in Turkey, as well. Even reporting about Kurdish aspirations for
    independence could run the risk of incurring an Article 301 offense.

    The Turkish press has a tradition of mixing fact-based news, opinion
    and speculation. Some of that speculation can sound highly provocative
    to American ears. It sounded that way to me when a senior journalist
    from the Islamist newspaper Yeni Safak mentioned that 9/11 was so bold
    and so complicated an event, it could only have been accomplished by
    Americans! The American visitors in the room were shocked into silence
    by that assertion. Later a U.S. diplomat said that similarly bizarre
    conspiracy theories get into the newspapers in Turkey constantly,
    in spite of all best efforts to debunk those stories.

    But it is the war in Iraq that darkens all conversations. We were
    asked repeatedly when the invasion of Iran would take place. Would
    Turkey be next? Has the influence of the neo-cons finally abated
    or will they re-emerge in a new guise? Is the rise in oil prices a
    deliberate or an unintentional result of the war?

    There were some tough and deeply felt questions (for which we
    visitors had no answers), but the questions were always asked in a
    spirit of warmth and admiration for American journalistic values,
    even if rarely for the policies of the Bush administration.

    An irony, noted by American and Turkish journalists alike, is that in
    a country of strong secular influences (historically enforced by the
    Turkish Army), the number of Turkish women who now wear the headscarf
    as a sign of their religious commitment to Islam has dramatically
    increased, as has the Turkish media's reporting on the tensions between
    Islam and politics in Turkey. We were told that the headscarf is,
    in part, a reaction to the war in Iraq and to the dramatic upsurge
    in public religious feelings.

    More Turkish News Ombudsmen

    At the same time, there is a growing interest in the role of news
    ombudsmen in the Turkish media as a necessary element in maintaining
    a free and independent news media.

    Along with longtime ombudsmen at national and secular newspapers
    such as Vatan, Hurriyet and Milliyet, two Islamist newspapers --
    Zaman and Yeni Safak -- have announced that they, too, will have
    readers' representatives. Other newspapers are rumored to be close
    to selecting ombudsmen as well.

    Appointing an ombudsman is a good move, in my opinion, because it
    recognizes the need for a public voice inside the newspaper. But not
    all Turkish newspapers seem completely willing, at this point, to give
    their ombudsmen the independence necessary to operate with sufficient
    credibility. Some still maintain other managerial or editorial duties
    inside the paper and they acknowledge that needs to change.

    That lack of a clear job definition is something that the Organization
    of News Ombudsmen will need to address at its annual gathering next
    month. In short, can one be considered an ombudsman if he or she
    retains a foot in the editorial or management ranks?

    I have enormous respect for our colleagues in the Turkish media. They
    have a complicated and sometimes dangerous balancing act they must
    perform daily, often under difficult legal, religious and cultural
    circumstances. In the end, I am hopeful that they can do this but,
    like all journalistic endeavors, the support and awareness of their
    colleagues at home and abroad is essential to their success.

    At one encounter with journalists in Ankara, we discussed the
    challenges that both American and Turkish journalists share in our
    common search of a media that understands its primary obligation is
    to serve the public. I quoted Thomas Jefferson: "A people cannot be
    both ignorant and free." A Turkish colleague responded with a quote
    from Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, founder of the modern Turkish republic:
    "The problem of a free press," said Ataturk, "can only be resolved
    by having more free press."

    Perhaps the similarities between Turkish and American journalism
    outweigh the differences after all.

    http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php ?storyId=5325594

    --Boundary_(ID_hWmxr2RMJS9wbixpS VXzsA)--
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