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  • Armenian Genocide Dispute Erupts At LAT

    ARMENIAN GENOCIDE DISPUTE ERUPTS AT LAT
    Kevin Roderick

    LA Observed, CA
    April 24 2007

    A dispute that has been quietly bubbling in the Times newsroom went
    public today when the publisher of the California Courier demanded
    that LAT managing editor Doug Frantz be fired for blocking publication
    of an article on the Armenian genocide by senior staff writer Mark
    Arax, who is of Armenian origin. According to Harut Sassounian, a
    widely quoted leader of the Armenian American community, Frantz feels
    Arax is biased on Armenian issues. Arax has lodged a discrimination
    complaint and threatened a federal lawsuit, says Sassounian. Arax,
    who lives in Fresno and writes for West magazine, told me he couldn't
    comment, but I've confirmed there is an internal investigation at
    the paper. Frantz emailed LA Observed:

    I put a hold on a story because of concerns that the reporter had
    expressed personal views about the topic in a public manner and
    therefore was not a disinterested party, which is required by our
    ethics guidelines, and because the reporter and an editor had gone
    outside the normal procedures for compiling and editing articles. My
    actions were based solely on the journalistic ethics and standards
    that we follow to ensure that readers of Times news coverage are not
    affected by the personal views of our reporters and editors.

    Here is Sassounian's piece, which cites emails between Frantz and Arax:

    When a company discriminates against an employee on the basis of his
    or her ethnic origin, it violates Title VII of the Civil Rights Act
    of 1964 which prohibits "employment discrimination based on race,
    color, religion, sex and national origin."

    It appears that such a breach of the law took place when Douglas
    Frantz, the Managing Editor of the Los Angeles Times, blocked the
    publication of an article on the Armenian Genocide written by Mark
    Arax, a distinguished journalist of Armenian origin, who has worked
    at the Times for 20 years.

    On April 11, 2007, in an e-mail to Arax, Frantz accused him of having
    "a conflict of interest that precludes you from writing about the
    Armenian genocide, and particularly about an ongoing congressional
    debate about it. ...Your personal stance on the issue, in my view,
    prohibits you from writing about the issue objectively."

    To justify his discriminatory action, Frantz used the pretext that
    Arax and five other reporters at The Times had signed a joint letter
    in September 2005, reminding the editors that the newspaper was
    not complying with its own policy of calling the Armenian Genocide,
    a genocide. The editors, at that time, had no problem with that letter.

    On the contrary, they thanked all six reporters -- five
    Armenian-Americans and one Jewish-American -- for the reminder and
    pledged to comply with the paper's policy on this issue.

    To make matters worse, in his e-mail, Frantz falsely referred to the
    above-cited letter as a "petition," and on that basis accused Arax of
    taking "a position" on the Armenian Genocide. He thus implied that all
    six letter-writers -- Mark Arax, Ralph Vartabedian, Robin Abcarian,
    Greg Krikorian, Chuck Philips, and Henry Weinstein -- were political
    activists rather than independent journalists.

    By "prohibiting" Arax from writing on the genocide issue, Frantz,
    by implication, was also prohibiting all six journalists, among them
    a Pulitzer Prize winner, of ever reporting on this subject. In other
    words, Frantz was not just blocking one particular article and its
    author, but all future articles on the Armenian Genocide that may be
    written by any of these six journalists, thus practically issuing a
    gag order that silences all Armenian Americans working at the Times.

    By the same logic, Frantz is implying that Latinos will be barred
    from writing on illegal immigrants, African American journalists
    from covering civil rights, Jewish-American reporters from writing
    about the Holocaust and Asian-Americans covering issues peculiar to
    their community.

    Sadly, Frantz's misrepresentation of the joint letter as a "petition"
    initially helped convince other editors at The Times that Arax had
    an ethnic bias, thus gaining their support in his decision not to
    run his article. Only days later did these editors take the trouble
    to investigate the matter and discovered that they were misled by
    Frantz. Jim O'Shea, the top editor of the Los Angeles Times, in a
    meeting with this writer last week, said that the letter signed by
    the six journalists was not a "petition" at all, and that there was
    nothing improper about it. In fact, he admitted that the letter upheld
    existing L.A. Times policy.

    Amazingly, even after discovering the truth, rather than reversing
    themselves and publishing the Arax story, The Times' editors continued
    to endorse Frantz's censorship and compounded the discrimination. They
    did this by assigning their Washington reporter, Richard Simon,
    supposedly to update Arax's story. Even though Frantz, in his April
    11 e-mail told Arax that he had "no questions" about his "abilities
    as a reporter and writer," he did use the excuse that Arax and
    Washington editor, Bob Ourlian, had gone around the "established
    system for assigning and editing stories." Obviously, this was a
    red-herring. The editors in the chain of command both in Washington
    and Los Angeles were aware of Arax's article and none of them had any
    questions or complaints about procedure or content. In fact, not even
    Frantz himself cited a single factual or bias problem with the story.

    The only problems he did point to were that Arax had taken a
    "personal" stand on the Armenian Genocide, which allegedly led him
    to have a "conflict of interest," presumably because of his Armenian
    heritage. Arax has written countless major investigative stories over
    the course of his 20 years at the Los Angeles Times, including several
    on the Armenian Genocide, but never had a single one of them "killed"
    by any editor. But that was before Frantz entered into the picture,
    moving from Istanbul to Los Angeles to become the newspaper's Managing
    Editor in November 2005.

    The thrust of Arax's story was not only about the clash between
    Turks and Armenians over the congressional resolution on the Armenian
    Genocide, but also about the split in the Jewish community between
    those who sympathize with the victims of the Armenian Genocide and
    those who put a higher premium on Israel's strategic alliance with
    Turkey.

    Richard Simon, on the other hand, proceeded to write a completely
    different story which was published in The Times on April 21. His
    article covered the conflicting political pressures affecting the
    adoption of the Armenian Genocide resolution by the Congress and its
    "uncertain" chances of approval. There was no reason to kill the Arax
    story to run Simon's. Both articles could have been published, one as
    a sidebar to the other. In a vain attempt to appease Arax and defuse
    a looming controversy that is sure to anger the half-a-million strong
    Armenian community in Southern California, a handful of paragraphs
    from Arax's article were incorporated into Simon's story. The editors
    told this writer that they were dismayed that Arax refused to have
    his name jointly appear on the byline for Simon's story. Even then,
    despite Arax's justified protests, the editors added a tagline at
    the end of the article, stating that Arax "contributed to this report."

    An investigation of this matter in the past two weeks has led this
    writer to believe that rather than Mark Arax having an ethnic bias,
    Douglas Frantz himself seems to be the source of the problem. Based
    on discussions with individuals familiar with various aspects of
    this controversy, conversations and meetings with top executives at
    the Times, and a contentious phone call with Frantz himself which
    he initiated, it appears that he has strongly held personal views on
    Armenian-Turkish issues which have clouded his professional judgment,
    causing him to take actions which are improper and possibly illegal:

    1) In a discriminatory e-mail, Frantz falsely accused Mark Arax and
    five other Times' reporters of signing a "petition" on the Armenian
    Genocide. This accusation was used as a pretext to block Arax's story
    on the Armenian Genocide.

    2) Frantz has reportedly made comments to at least one co-worker at
    The Times that he personally opposed the congressional resolution
    on the Armenian Genocide. He also said he believes that Armenians
    rebelled against the Turks, an argument used by Turkish denialists
    to justify the genocide.

    3) Frantz was stationed for several years in Turkey, first working
    for the New York Times as Istanbul Bureau Chief and then for the
    Los Angeles Times during which he may have developed very natural
    friendships with Turkish individuals and officials.

    4) The Turkish Consul General in Los Angeles has reportedly bragged
    about his close friendship with Douglas Frantz and said that he turns
    to him whenever he has a problem with The Times.

    5) This writer was told by the editor of The Times, Jim O'Shea, who has
    known Frantz for many years from their time together at the Chicago
    Tribune, that Frantz has a very abrasive personality. No wonder he
    was short-tempered and abrupt during a phone conversation that he
    initiated, falsely accusing this writer of threatening him, when in
    fact he was simply being told that the controversy regarding the Arax
    article might upset the Armenian community, if it turned out that
    the story was blocked due to the Armenian background of the journalist.

    6) Frantz is scheduled to moderate a panel at a conference in Istanbul,
    May 12-15, on "Turkey: Sharing the Democratic Experience."

    The panelists are asked to discuss: "Can the Turkish experience be
    emulated by other countries in the region and beyond?" Among the
    speakers at the conference are the President, Prime Minister and
    Foreign Minister of Turkey. One of the participants on the panel
    chaired by Frantz is none other than Andrew Mango, a notorious
    genocide denialist. Despite being sponsored by the International
    Press Institute, the conference does not cover the lack of freedom
    of speech in Turkey, the jailing and killing of journalists such as
    Hrant Dink, and draconian laws on "denigrating Turkishness." O'Shea
    told this writer that the Los Angeles Times will be paying Frantz'
    airfare to participate in this conference. Would The Times pay for
    Frantz's trip, if he were moderating a panel that included David
    Irving, the infamous Holocaust revisionist?

    Arax has filed a discrimination complaint with The Times against
    Frantz. He is also considering a Federal lawsuit for the possible
    violation of his civil rights. The Times executives are expected to
    make a decision this week on what action, if any, they would take
    against Frantz.

    The Publisher of The Times, David Hiller, and the Editor, Jim
    O'Shea, reassured this writer last week that they would not tolerate
    any executive who has a bias against the Armenian Genocide and
    discriminates against Armenian-American employees. Once the internal
    investigation is complete, the expectation is that the top management
    of The Times would do the right thing and find an appropriate way of
    eliminating the hostile working environment created by Douglas Frantz
    at one of the nation's greatest newspapers.

    It is hard to imagine how Frantz could continue working at a newspaper
    in a community where more than half a million Armenians reside, given
    his unfavorable actions against his Armenian-American colleagues and
    his negative views on the Armenian Genocide.

    The Armenian community highly values the special relationship it has
    developed in recent months with the publisher and other executives at
    the Los Angeles Times. The opinion column written by Matt Welch, the
    Times' assistant editorial page editor, published on Sunday, April 22,
    is another indication of the newspaper's solid position on the facts
    of the Armenian Genocide. The Frantz episode is an aberration and
    has to be dealt with as such. His continued presence at the highest
    echelons of this venerable newspaper would only serve to antagonize
    the Armenian community and all those who care about the upholding
    of equal rights for all employees regardless of their race, color,
    religion, sex and national origin.

    http://www.laobserved.com/archive/2007/04 /armenian_genocide_dispute.php
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