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Soma: Iraq's New Paper Tiger

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  • Soma: Iraq's New Paper Tiger

    SOMA: IRAQ'S NEW PAPER TIGER
    Adnan R. Khan

    Macleans, Canada
    Aug. 30, 2006

    Launching a newspaper is hard enough -- even without an insurgency.

    But a Canadian editor and founder is toughing it out.

    A new voice has entered the media fray in Iraq, one with a Canadian
    twist. Soma, meaning "perspective" in Kurdish, is a biweekly
    English-language digest published out of Iraqi Kurdistan. It's headed
    by a Canadian whose vision is to transform journalism in Iraq. And,
    says editor and founder Tanya Goudsouzian, "It's been a challenge."

    Indeed. Goudsouzian is a 29-year-old Montreal native of Armenian
    descent who speaks no Kurdish and only very basic Arabic. She launched
    the paper in February 2006 with the help of Hiro Ibrahim Ahmad,
    the wife of Iraqi President Jalal Talabani. And the road to her
    cramped office in Sulaymaniyah, a city 275 km north of Baghdad and
    the regional headquarters of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK),
    the political party headed by Talabani, has been anything but smooth.

    After graduating from McGill in 1998, Goudsouzian moved to Washington
    to work at a magazine focusing on Middle Eastern issues. She left in
    2000, moving to Cairo, then landing a staff position at Gulf News
    in Dubai. She covered Afghanistan and Iraq, where she met Ahmad,
    who worked in journalism before her husband became the Iraqi leader.

    Since its launch, Soma has been pumping out 4,000 issues every two
    weeks, with website traffic surpassing 100,000 hits. Also remarkable
    is the fact that it is distributed nationally. "We print out of
    Baghdad," says Goudsouzian. "Every issue has to be sent south for
    printing and distribution and then issues have to be flown back to
    Kurdistan. The main reason we send the paper south is I want it to
    have a national appeal. It's geared for the English-speaking community
    and English-speaking Iraqis throughout Iraq, not just Kurdistan."

    Soma must contend with a journalistic mindset still firmly rooted
    in the Baathist era. For the most part, the Iraqi media remains a
    mouthpiece for those in power, only now there are more mouths. In
    Kurdistan, Iraq's most democratized region, only one of dozens of
    publications is fully independent: the weekly Hawlati. And, says its
    editor, Twana Osman, 31, "There are certain subjects you just can't
    touch. We've had journalists arrested for criticizing the government,
    for example. I've been formally charged for criticizing the Kurdish
    regional prime minister."

    Soma has been pigeonholed as a PUK organ, Goudsouzian complains. "I
    know it sounds like a contradiction, the wife of the president funding
    a newspaper," she says, "but Hiro is genuinely interested in a free
    press." There are, after all, very few people with money in Iraq who
    are not associated with a party. "So if you receive funding at all,"
    Goudsouzian says, "it's likely you're receiving it from someone with
    party affiliations."

    Soma does not consider itself a political watchdog. Goudsouzian
    admits she tries to avoid taboo subjects, such as censuring certain
    powerful individuals. "I don't want it to be filled with yellow
    news-style personal attacks," she says, noting that tendency in other
    publications. "I want to change things. I take young journalists to
    interviews so they see how it should be done. I'm training these guys
    on how to report, how to construct a story." Injecting professionalism
    into an underdeveloped journalistic community is idealistic, and
    difficult. But, Goudsouzian says, "You're taking part in the rebuilding
    of a civilization. You have to be an idealist or you'd go nuts. I
    don't plan on being here forever. But I plan on leaving my mark."
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