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Robert Fisk: No Wonder The Bloggers Are Winning

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  • Robert Fisk: No Wonder The Bloggers Are Winning

    The Independent

    Robert Fisk: No Wonder The Bloggers Are Winning

    These Gutless Papers Explain Why More People Are Googling Than Turning Pages
    Published: 21 July 2007
    I despise the internet. It's irresponsible and, often, a net of
    hate. And I don't have time for Blogopops. But here's a tale of
    two gutless newspapers which explains why more and more people are
    Googling rather than turning pages.

    First the Los Angeles Times. Last year, reporter Mark Arax was
    assigned a routine story on the 1915 genocide of one and a half
    million Armenians by the Ottoman Turkish authorities. Arax's report
    focused on divisions within the local Jewish community over whether
    to call the genocide a genocide.

    It's an old argument. The Turks insist - against all the facts and
    documents and eyewitness accounts, and against history - that the
    Armenians were victims of a civil war. The Israeli government and its
    new, Nobel prize-winning president, Shimon Peres - anxious to keep
    cosy relations with modern Turkey - have preferred to adopt Istanbul's
    mendacious version of events. However, many Jews, both inside and
    outside Israel, have bravely insisted that they do constitute a
    genocide, indeed the very precursor to the later Nazi Holocaust of
    six million Jews.

    But Arax's genocide report was killed on the orders of managing editor
    Douglas Frantz because the reporter had a "position on the issue"
    and "a conflict of interest".

    Readers will already have guessed that Arax is an
    Armenian-American. His sin, it seems, was that way back in 2005,
    he and five other writers wrote a formal memo to LA Times editors
    reminding them that the paper's style rules meant that the Armenian
    genocide was to be called just that - not "alleged genocide". Frantz,
    however, described the old memo as a "petition" and apparently accused
    Arax of landing the assignment by dealing with a Washington editor
    who was also an Armenian.

    The story was reassigned to Washington reporter Rich Simon, who
    concentrated on Turkey's attempt to block Congress from recognising
    the Armenian slaughter -- and whose story ran under the headline
    "Genocide Resolution Still Far From Certain".

    LA Times executives then went all coy, declining interviews, although
    Frantz admitted in a blog (of course) that he had "put a hold" on
    Arax's story because of concerns that the reporter "had expressed
    personal views about the topic in a public (sic) manner...". Ho ho.

    Truth can be dangerous for the LA Times. Even more so, it seems, when
    the managing editor himself - Frantz, no less - once worked for The
    New York Times, where he referred to the Armenian massacres as, yes,
    an "alleged" genocide. Frantz, it turns out, joined the LA Times as
    its Istanbul correspondent.

    Well, Arax has since left the LA Times after a settlement
    which forestalled a lawsuit against the paper for defamation and
    discrimination. His employers heaped praise upon his work while Frantz
    has just left the paper to become Middle East correspondent of the
    Wall Street Journal based in - of course, you guessed it - Istanbul.

    But now let's go north of the border, to the Toronto Globe and Mail,
    which assigned columnist Jan Wong to investigate a college murder
    in Montreal last September. Wong is not a greatly loved reporter. A
    third-generation Canadian, she moved to China during Mao's "cultural
    revolution" and, in her own words, "snitched on class enemies and
    did my best to be a good little Maoist."

    She later wrote a "Lunch With" series for the Globe in which she
    acted all sympathetic to interviewee "When they relax, that's when
    their guard is down," she told a college newspaper. "It's a trick,
    but it's legit." Yuk!

    Wong's take on the Montreal Dawson College shooting, however, was
    more serious. She compared the killer to a half-Algerian Muslim who
    murdered 14 women in another Montreal college shooting in 1989 and to
    a Russian immigrant who killed four university colleagues in Montreal
    in 1992. "In all three cases," she wrote, "the perpetrator was not
    'pure laine', the argot for a 'pure' francophone. Elsewhere, to talk
    of racial purity is repugnant. Not in Quebec."

    Painfully true, I'm afraid. Parisians, who speak real French, would
    never use such an expression - pure laine translates literally as "pure
    wool" but means "authentic" - but some Montrealers do. Wong, however,
    had touched a red hot electric wire in "multicultural" Canada. Prime
    Minister Stephen Harper complained. "Grossly irresponsible," said
    the man who enthusiastically continued the policy of sending Canadian
    troops on their suicidal mission to Afghanistan.

    The French-Canadian newspaper Le Devoir - can you imagine a British
    paper selling a single copy if it called itself "Duty"? - published
    a cartoon of Wong with exaggerated Chinese slanted eyes. Definitely
    not pure laine for Le Devoir. The hate mail was even more to the
    point. Some contained excrement.

    But then the Globe and Mail ran for cover. Its editor-in-chief,
    Edward Greenspon, wrote a cowardly column in which he claimed
    that the offending paragraphs "should have been removed" from her
    story. "We regret that we allowed these words to get into a reported
    (sic) article," he sniffled. There had been a breakdown in what he
    hilariously called "the editorial quality control process".

    Now I happen to know a bit about the Globe's "quality control
    process". Some time ago, I discovered that the paper had reprinted an
    article of mine from The Independent about the Armenian genocide. But
    they had tampered with it, altering my word "genocide" to read
    "tragedy".

    The Independent's subscribers promise to make no changes to our
    reports. But when our syndication folk contacted the Globe, they
    discovered that the Canadian paper had simply stolen the article. They
    were made to pay a penalty fee. But as for the censorship of the word
    "genocide", a female executive explained to The Independent that
    nothing could be done because the editor responsible had "since left
    the Globe and Mail".

    It's the same old story, isn't it? Censor then whinge, then cut and
    run. No wonder the bloggers are winning.

    http://news.independent.co.uk/fisk/artic le2788619.ece
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