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O'Shea Memo On The Armenian Issue

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  • O'Shea Memo On The Armenian Issue

    O'SHEA MEMO ON THE ARMENIAN ISSUE
    Kevin Roderick

    LA Observed, CA
    April 27 2007

    Editor Jim O'Shea has emailed the L.A. Times staff a response to
    all the hubbub about Mark Arax and whether or not a story was killed
    because of concerns that he was biased in favored of Armenian views.

    O'Shea's position is that the story was not killed, merely sent back
    for more reporting. He also vows that a reporter's ethnicity would not
    be reason for being taken off a story. After O'Shea's memo below is a
    response from assistant managing editor Simon Li detailing how managing
    editor Doug Frantz came to be moderating a panel in Turkey next month.

    From: OShea, James Sent: Thursday, April 26, 2007 5:09 PM

    To the Staff:

    In recent days, many members of the Armenian community have registered
    their concern that Managing Editor Doug Frantz killed a news story
    about the Armenian genocide resolution because the writer, Mark Arax,
    is of Armenian descent. I recognize the gravity of this issue and
    I have taken these complaints seriously. Many staffers and readers
    have written me on this issue and I felt a need to respond.

    An independent internal investigation by a Los Angeles Times lawyer
    from the paper's Human Resources Department and Leo Wolinsky, a
    managing editor who reports directly to me, is being completed. This is
    standard practice on complaints of this nature. All of the parties
    involved are being interviewed and consulted. As with any such
    action involving employees, this is a confidential investigation
    being conducted in complete compliance with employment laws.

    However, I need to set the record straight because much of the
    publicity surrounding this issue is inaccurate.

    First of all, the allegation that the story was killed is not true.

    Doug Frantz did place a hold on the story about a pending congressional
    resolution in which the Congress would recognize as genocide the
    massive deaths of Armenians at the hands of Ottoman Turks. The
    editorial policy of this paper is to recognize the Armenian genocide
    as a historical fact, although the Turkish government does not.

    The story in question was sent back to the department from which it
    emanated for additional reporting and because of concerns by Doug that
    the story, as written, might be in violation of the ethics policy
    of the Los Angeles Times. This was not because of the ethnicity of
    the reporter but because the policy prohibits reporters from covering
    stories if they have taken a position or some action that could appear
    to compromise their objectivity. There is no implication here that
    Armenians can't cover the Armenian community or that other ethnic
    groups can't do likewise. In this case, the question arose over a
    particular letter signed by Mark and others about the paper's policy
    on writing about the genocide.

    Doug made me aware of his concerns, which is the appropriate thing
    for a managing editor to do.

    I agreed that we needed to resolve the conflict issue and that the
    story needed further reporting on the legislative prospects for the
    resolution's success or failure, which I considered to be highly
    relevant. The supervising editors then assigned a reporter who covers
    Capitol Hill to report on that aspect.

    In subsequent days, the Capitol Hill reporter uncovered additional
    material involving the position on the resolution of House Speaker
    Nancy Pelosi, reporting that elevated the story for California
    readers. The story, with the new developments and the legislative
    prospects for the resolution, ran on page one of the Los Angeles Times
    about a week after the original was placed on hold. The original story
    focused heavily on the problems that the resolution was causing for
    the supporters of Israel, which was included in the revised story.

    Editors showed Mark the new story with the additional reporting and he
    was given the opportunity to add material or suggest changes. He did
    suggest changes that were made, but he nonetheless insisted that his
    by-line be removed unless the story ran as written. In the interest
    of transparency, a credit line was attached noting that he contributed.

    I made my decision with the best interests of the readers in mind.

    The story that appeared in the newspaper was the best one.

    Over the past two years, the Los Angeles Times has run 67 stories
    on Armenia or Armenians, including 26 on the Armenian genocide
    resolution and 13 that dealt specifically with the political fate of
    the resolution. This does not include editorials, op-ed pieces and
    letters to the editor. No one is trying to censor anyone. The issue
    has been fully aired in the pages of this newspaper, including in
    last week's front page story reported in part by Mark.

    There were problems with the ways and means by which the decisions
    on this story were communicated. And while I am not going to make
    public the results of any internal investigation, I can say that no
    one has concluded anyone was biased in their personnel decisions.

    Also, while I appreciate the strong feeling this episode has
    engendered, an email campaign against any reporter or editor at
    this paper will not move me to make any decisions that are unfair or
    unjust. I am working diligently to resolve the issues raised by this
    incident and to make sure they are clear to everyone. I will do what
    I think is right.

    As the editor of the newspaper, I accept responsibility for our
    decisions, fully and completely.

    Let me make one thing clear. I would never tolerate anyone on the
    staff making decisions on a story out of a bias or because of the
    ethnicity of the writer. In this case, that did not happen.

    James O'Shea Editor The Los Angeles Times

    Simon Li's response, sent to LA Weekly writer Daniel Hernandez:

    Daniel: May I please set the record straight on one portion of your
    article about The Times, the repetition of a nasty innuendo from
    Harut Sassounian's piece urging that Managing Editor Doug Frantz be
    fired over Mark Arax's accusations.

    I refer to this passage: "As Sassounian noted, Frantz is scheduled
    to be back in Istanbul next month to moderate a panel for the
    International Press Institute's World Congress that is titled, "Turkey:
    Sharing the Democratic Experience." Among the panelists is Andrew
    Mango, who Sassounian describes as a "notorious genocide denialist."

    In repeating that part of Sassounian's unfounded implication, you
    gave it credence; the more it is repeated, the more it will seem like
    factual evidence of Doug's alleged prejudice to biased, unthinking,
    credulous readers.

    The facts are these: As one of three vice chairmen of the International
    Press Institute, I put Doug's name forward last spring as a journalist
    who might help us by taking part in the program of the organization's
    annual world congress, precisely because of his knowledge of Turkey. I
    specifically suggested that we invite novelist Orhan Pamuk, who
    was later awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature, and ask Doug to
    interview him one-on-one.

    The IPI host committee in Turkey, at the strong urging of the IPI
    Secretariat in Vienna, accepted the basic idea, adding another
    Turkish writer Elif Shafak for the congress' opening session. Doug
    duly received an invitation to act as interviewer of these two
    writers. Both of them, it's relevant to note, have been subject to
    legal action and personal threats precisely because they have written
    or spoken urging their countrymen to change the majority view about
    the Armenian genocide. Doug graciously agreed.

    But then that panel failed to materialize, for what reasons I don't
    know. Doug agreed to moderate the opening session with a different
    panel, consisting of Shafak, a Lebanese broadcaster and Shirin Ebadi,
    the Iranian lawyer who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2003.

    Then that idea fell apart, too. I was later told that after the murder
    of Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in January, both Pamuk and Shafak
    had safety concerns about returning to Turkey from their temporary
    domiciles abroad.

    IPI then asked Doug, somewhat apologetically, whether he was still
    game to moderate a panel. I believe they offered him the title of
    the session in question and a description of it, without specifying
    the participants. The description, incidentally, does not mention
    the Armenian question.

    Thus, Doug came to be moderator of this panel through a series of
    accidents of the sort that any convention program planner would be
    familiar with. He did not choose the topic, nor the speakers. His
    role will be to facilitate the discussion. Discussion is what IPI, as
    an international organization that defends and promotes journalistic
    freedom, implicitly seeks to promote.

    I don't know whether Sassounian's description of Mango is fair
    or widely accepted, any more than I know anything about the three
    others on the panel--the director of the Topkapi museum, a Turkish
    newspaper editor and a Syrian political scientist working at a
    German university. What I do know is that any innuendo that Doug is
    scheduled to moderate this panel because he shares the views of any
    of its participants--or the particular views of one that Sassounian
    condemns-is at best reckless and at worse maliciously prejudicial.

    Sincerely,

    Simon K.C. Li Assistant Managing Editor Los Angeles Times

    http://www.laobserved.com/archive/2007/04/o shea_memo_on_the_armenia_1.php
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