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Almost A Legend: Interview With Robert Fisk

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  • Almost A Legend: Interview With Robert Fisk

    Almost a legend: Interview With Robert Fisk

    The Sun Daily
    http://www.thesundaily.com/article.cfm?id=46 136
    April 28 2010
    Malaysia

    The Independent's Middle East correspondent Robert Fisk has most
    probably seen it all - from gory bodies to Osama bin Laden. After 34
    years in the trade and covering the wars in the region, he describes
    journalism as he practises it and what he has seen. ZAKIAH KOYA and
    MEENA L. RAMADAS find out what makes this man tick.

    WHEN did you start writing as a journalist?

    At 12, I saw an Alfred Hitchcock movie, The Foreign Correspondent. In
    the movie, the character gets sent to Europe to cover the outbreak
    of WWII, he sees the assassination of a diplomat in Amsterdam, he's
    chased by Gestapo agents, uncovers a German spy in London, survives
    an air crash in the Atlantic and wins the most beautiful woman in the
    movie. At 12, I thought this is what I wanted (to do). So, I never
    deviated from that.

    After I left school, I did not go straight to university. I joined
    The Evening Chronicle published in Newcastle. So, I started like all
    journalists, covering magistrate's courts, mothers' union meetings,
    shipping stories; so I started off like that and then I got a part-time
    job at The Sunday Express on the gossip column.

    On the gossip column?

    Yes. I would chase after vicars who had run off with their
    daughters-in-laws, things like that. It was good practice for covering
    Northern Ireland and the Middle East. Then I wanted to go to Northern
    Ireland so I joined The Times. I sat through 29 interviews. Then
    in 1974, The Times sent me to cover the aftermath of the Portuguese
    Revolution. In 1975, I got a letter from the foreign editor that our
    correspondent in Beirut had just married and asked if I would like
    to go to Lebanon. I was 29, and the idea of being The Times Middle
    East correspondent, before Murdoch of course, was quite something.

    Because of my father I always had this tremendous interest in history.

    My father would take me around the sites that were used as battlefields
    of WWI in France and of course, teach about WW II. So, I grew up
    knowing a lot about history.

    Are you a Muslim?

    I'm a journalist. Journalism is my religion.

    How is it that you feel so strongly about the Middle East?

    If it was the other way, and most of the Middle East was Jewish land
    and a Muslim state was taking the lands away and bombing them, I would
    say exactly the same about the Jewish inhabitants. It does not matter.

    I do not take sides. If there is a side, it is the ethical issue of
    who is suffering here. If I see a massacre, I am very angry about it.

    If you see people being murdered, you get angry. I am allowed to be
    angry too. Being a journalist does not mean I am injected with some
    force of neutrality.

    Do you sleep after seeing all these corpses?

    Oh yes. I do not report these things to weep over them. I get angry
    but I report them so that people know the truth of what is happening,
    that is my job. If you are a journalist in a war and you feel it is
    affecting you, well, you fly home, business class, and do not come
    back. Do another job. Become a theatre critic. The people you should
    worry about are not the journalists, but the people who cannot get out
    of the country, who spend day and night trying to keep their families
    alive and protected and who have pariah passports and no visas.

    Being in the Middle East

    When you were sent there as a correspondent, did you know what you
    were supposed to do?

    What I knew about Middle East history was what I learned in current
    affairs books. I did not speak Arabic, I could not read Arabic but I
    can now. So I started with a considerable disadvantage. I learnt two
    things very quickly; first, rely, talk and listen to Arab reporters who
    spoke French, Arab and other languages. I never go near the embassies.

    When I was travelling to Beirut, I decided to not spend all my time
    mixing with other Western journalists because all you are going to do
    is produce the same material. There are a few Western journalists who
    I like. I have a good friend Ed Cody. He was the number two of the
    AP Bureau in Beirut, he was a brilliant Arabist, he started teaching
    me Arabic from day one in battles.

    There was a Polish journalist who was in the Warsaw uprising in 1943
    against the Germans. He was very experienced in war. When it came to
    survival, I relied on these few people. But when it came to learning
    about what was going on in the Middle East, one of the first people
    I went to see in Egypt was Mohamad Hasanein Heikal (leading Egyptian
    journalist) who has been a friend ever since. I lived in a Hezbollah
    village in southern Lebanon where no one spoke English. So I had to
    learn Arabic the old, hard, tough way. Sometimes, the schoolchildren
    would take me to their school and teach me.

    Would you say that Middle East correspondents now have it easier?

    Well, we do have mobile phones now. And email. In the war especially,
    we had to use a Telex machine. To get a call out of a major hotel in
    Egypt; and there were only two hotels, the Meridien and the Hilton;
    would take a day. So, there were enormous communication problems. Just
    getting money transferred was impossible. I remember once when my
    money was sent to an Egyptian bank, it took me three weeks to get it
    out and they kept losing documents.

    What do you think about the perception that western media seem to
    have an agenda when reporting Middle East issues?

    The western media start making sure the words they use do not offend
    anyone. I mean in the case of Middle East, they are always worried
    the Israelis would complain or the embassies would complain or lobby
    groups will complain. In other words they would call a war not a war
    but an offence. Then they call occupied territory a disputed territory,
    something you can solve in court over a cup of tea. So when the
    Palestinians use violence to reject the war and the occupation, they
    are generically violent because it is a dispute, it is only an offence.

    You were criticised a lot when you wrote about your beating by Afghan
    refugees in 2001.

    Yes, and I told in my story, the reason they beat me was because all
    their families had just been killed by an American B52 in Kandahar.

    All the people who criticised my article left that bit out. They
    neutered the reasons and made it into a mad Afghan mob and well,
    Robert, who is supposed to be so keen on Islam, forgave them. Well,
    I did not forgive them, I said I would have done the same if my family
    had been killed by an American bomber. I knew that these were the
    most crushed people in the world, the Afghan world. It was a fair
    comment and I stand by it.

    What about other difficulties?

    The only country where I found antagonism was Turkey where my writing
    about the Armenian genocide is much resented, not by ordinary people
    who know it was true, but by political people.

    On journalism

    Who do you write for?

    When I write an article, I'm writing a letter to a friend, the reader.

    When you write to a good friend, you tell them the truth. It also saves
    you from explaining the whole history of what you are writing about. I
    work on the principle that people know what is going on in the Middle
    East. They do not need to be told the same set of material each time;
    one point of view, a different point of view of the matter; they know
    what is going on, otherwise, they would not be reading the article.

    What is journalism to you?

    If you work for a paper that does not print what you write unless it
    accords with the editorial line, that is not journalism for me but a
    lot of people put up with it. I always believe that the journalists
    have to be good friends and colleagues with the editor, not moan and
    whine if the editor does not like the story, but know that the guy
    trusts you to get it right.

    When I was at the The Times, that was the case and now with The
    Independent, all of my editors have stood by me all the time,
    without exception. They have defended me. I have been attacked by
    Arab governments but the Israelis now do not even raise my name to
    my editors. They know there is no point.

    Do you believe in covering as an armchair journalist?

    No, I do not. If I cannot go to wars, I do not cover them.

    Was there any time when your story got axed for political reasons?

    When I was with The Times in Northern Ireland, I was bitterly attacked
    by the British army because I revealed in the paper correctly that they
    had death squads who were crossing the border into the Irish republic.

    My editor, who was a part-time soldier in a historic British cavalry
    regiment, stood by me and told the Defence Ministry to go to hell
    basically; he would not tolerate me being attacked. He was a model
    editor for me. I try to make sure all my editors are like him (laughs).

    I can remember two incidents. When Murdoch took over, I stayed with
    the paper a little while and then I moved to The Independent along
    with many of my colleagues.

    Why did you leave?

    In 1988 just before the end of the Iraq-Iran war, an American warship
    called The Vincennes shot down an Iranian airline carrying more than
    200 passengers. I went straight to Dubai because the airline was en
    route to Dubai from Bandar-e-Abbas in southern Iran. The next day
    I went to Iran and saw all the corpses including the children with
    wedding costumes. I then went straight to my friends who worked in air
    traffic control in Dubai who were Brits and they told me this warship
    has been challenging British Airways aircraft, it has been challenging,
    aggressively, all commercial airliners - we all knew something like
    this would happen. It was clear from the radio traffic that the
    crew and the captain were panicking. All subsequent enquiries proved
    that it was accurate. When the captain gave the decision to fire the
    missiles, they still had the seamen trying to look up the commercial
    flights from Iran. They said the transponder was not working on the
    aircraft but it was. When I filed my first story on the panicking of
    the Americans and how they had been challenging commercial flights,
    all that material was taken out of the copy and the editorial said,
    which I did not write, it was probably a suicide pilot. I had already
    spoken to the editor about the danger of suggesting that because
    I did not believe it was but the editor said it was possible. In
    fact, the article ran in the second edition not the first. That was
    the reason I decided to leave The Times. I had found out what had
    happened, I got it right and all the subsequent enquiries proved I
    was correct. I sent the same story to an Irish daily whose editor is
    a friend of mine and we printed it in Ireland.

    In those days, what you could read in Ireland you could not read
    in London.

    Subsequently when I left The Times, the chief foreign night subeditor
    wrote to me telling me the editor had been frightened of Murdoch and
    who described my report as a load of rubbish because it did was not
    what Murdoch would have liked. So I left the paper. I do not work
    for papers that are political.

    Did Independent ever interfere with any of your articles?

    In 1989, I wrote a story about how the Israelis had bombed a house in
    southern Lebanon which they believed belonged to a Hezbollah leader
    who ran a TV station. The man was not in Hezbollah, the information
    was wrong and they killed the man's two daughters who were waiting
    in front of the house for their school bus. I went to the mortuary
    and saw the bodies.

    I knew one of our subeditors was pro-Israeli but I never paid attention
    because he can have his own personal views. In fact, what happened, he
    took out the description of the dead girls which is important to the
    reader and the headline for the story was "School girls fall victim
    to border war" when in fact they were killed by Israeli aircraft. I
    found out the foreign sub in London had deleted all of my copy from
    the screen, we did not use computers back then. I do not know why he
    did that. Fortunately, I had kept a copy and I had sent it to all the
    editors and italicised all the bits that were edited with the headline
    and I made a complaint. The next result I heard from the foreign desk,
    this guy went to the foreign desk and said I was anti-Semitic, which
    was also my complaint. I told a lawyer friend of mine, who also knew
    the sub, to tell the sub that I will sue him if he ever says anything
    like that again. I am not a racist, I am not an anti-Semitic. And a
    few weeks later, he left the paper. I do not know why. But that was
    not the newspaper. It was an individual who took it upon himself to
    pulvarise my copy. I work on the principle that people's personal
    opinion do not interfere with editing

    Journalists are supposed to be objective - you seem very subjective
    in your writings.

    I think you should be neutral and unbiased on the side of those who
    suffer. When you start off in journalism, you have a 50-50 sort of
    journalism, half from one side and half from the other. That is all
    right when you are writing about a football match or public inquiry
    into a new motorway where protesters will lose their lands.

    But the Middle East is not a football match, it is a bloody tragedy and
    you have got to have some idea of the morality of what is happening
    there. If people are being dispossessed of their land, if it is
    being taken from them against all international law then these are
    the people you should be concentrating on. If you're reporting the
    slave trade, do you spend half your story interviewing the slave
    ship captain? Excuse me. If you're reporting the liberation of an
    extermination camp in WW II, you talk to the survivors and write
    about the Jewish dead. You do not go and interview the SS commander,
    excuse me. I mean you can but give the person one paragraph.

    When I was in Jerusalem in August 2001, an Islamic Jihad Palestinian
    blew himself up in an Israeli restaurant full of kids. I was just down
    the road. I saw everything; a child without eyes, a woman with a table
    leg through her. I did not write half the story about Islamic Jihad's
    reasons. About the Sabra and Shatila massacre in 1982, I was in the
    camps before the murderers left. I did not give the Israeli army half
    my story to make excuses to why they did not do anything. I wrote
    about the survivors and the dead who I had to literally climb over.

    So, my answer is yes, neutral and unbiased on the side of those
    who suffer.

    When we read your articles, you seem to get most of your stories from
    the locals.

    Most people tell the truth most of the time. That applies to Northern
    Ireland when I was reporting in Belfast.

    What is it about you, you think, people open up to you and tell you
    their secrets?

    Because I take them seriously. They don't tell me their secrets. I
    think they take me seriously. And they are right to do so. I am a
    serious person. By the way a lot of people do lie. Governments are
    keen on doing so.

    How do you deal with facts that you are not so sure about?

    If I'm suspicious of someone I make it very clear in my report that I
    am suspicious so this is a way of saying to the reader watch out. I do
    not just use words like claimed or alleged. I sometimes say it sounds
    like a tall story to me which is what you say in a letter. So I make it
    pretty clear if I do not trust someone no one who read my article can
    pin me down for the fact that I do not trust them. But that does not
    mean they should not be given a voice. They might be telling the truth.

    Do you think your writings have made a difference?

    I cannot think of a single story that has saved anyone's life. It
    might have.

    What about people in power who are looking at it?

    No, I do not think it changes. They know what is going on anyway,
    people in power. You do not need to reveal to them something you do
    not know. What you need to do is to reveal things to other people
    who do not know so that they will have to admit it. I do not think
    we have changed anything.

    Many journalists are afraid of having suits against them.

    In England particularly, the law is biased against newspapers. And it
    is very, very easy to get a writ. I have gotten a lot of writs but they
    have either been withdrawn or I have won them all. I have never lost
    a case, which means I work hard to get my facts correct when I write.

    Covering Palestine

    Which incident stuck in your mind?

    Oh, definitely Sabra and Shatila. I have never seen so many people
    murdered in one place. I literally, at one point, to get to a
    neighbouring street, had to climb over what I thought was a bank of
    earth but, in fact, when I was on top of it, it was bouncing beneath me
    with corpses lightly covered with earth. I could see a woman's head,
    a shoulder upon someone's stomach underneath it. Of course the place
    stank terribly, it was hot.

    I had never seen so many dead women and children and babies shot next
    to their mothers. I had never seen anything on this scale. This was
    a war crime; Sabra and Shatila is a war crime.

    When Israelis banned journalists from Gaza, what did you think?

    One of the best things of the banning of western reporters in Gaza,
    you had Palestinians, for the first time, telling their own stories. I
    have actually got here our guy's coverage. His father was killed in
    an air raid in the first days of the war. That was our front page:
    "The death and life of my father", 5 January 2009. If you look at it,
    it is a moving story. Written brilliantly.

    Is there any vivid memory of anyone - child or woman - which has
    touched you?

    Last December, in Northern Lebanon near Hermel, I discovered a Shi'ite
    village. What happened was this guy went on the Haj in 2008 or 2009.

    Now he is a truck driver - a poor guy - five children. Parents are
    both alive, mother very ill, and several years ago in Lebanon he
    worked at a now defunct television station called Shehrazad TV out of
    Beirut. It was a satellite TV, a junk programme, and he used to answer
    viewers queries on whether they should get married, how should they
    make up their arguments with their boyfriends. He went on the Haj. A
    day before he was supposed to leave the religious police arrests
    him for witchcraft. His name is Sabat (as reported). It is wrong
    in the papers. The transliteration would be Bsat. I went to see his
    family. I was sitting and talking there and at this time he was about
    to be executed within a week and I wanted to get a page in the paper
    so that the Saudis knew they were being watched. While I was sitting
    there, his second youngest child, little girl, aged about five - in
    her school uniform - and she came and sat beside me on the sofa and she
    put her school bag down and looked at me and said have you come to get
    my dad out of prison? And I thought Christ, how do you reply to that?

    And she asked it with innocence. I was foreign, I could help. I could
    help. I wrote the story. There was nothing eloquent about it, it was
    the total innocence.

    What did you reply?

    I said I did not know.

    What is your opinion of the Arab women in the wars?

    My first contact with Palestinians in Beirut was with Fatah and they
    were involved in the civil war. A few women were involved in the
    civil war. Once I had time, and this included during the war as well,
    I spent a lot of time talking to families about their experiences of
    leaving Palestine in '47, '48. You know there were several exoduses
    over a period of months. And I was talking to Palestinian women who
    because, in some cases, their husbands had died or were killed, so
    they were in charge of the family narrative. I think the women were
    more certain they would go home; which of course they will not do;
    than the men. The men had become disillusioned as the years went by.

    What about the women suicide bombers?

    Not that many. There were a few in Lebanon and some of them were not
    even Muslim. The Syrian Social National Party had a female suicide
    bomber. She managed to kill Fijian soldiers. It would be pleasant
    for you to hear that women are playing a more prominent role in the
    struggle for justice in the Arab world. They certainly do play a role
    but they have an awful lot of hindrances to get around and their role
    in society, in the patriarchal society, makes it very difficult

    On Osama bin Laden

    You interviewed Osama?

    Yes. Three times and he was interested with me doing it for the fourth
    time but I could not reach him during the war. I first met him in 1993.

    Did you ever doubt his existence?

    No, I did not. I saw pictures of him. The revolving door of the
    western mindset, they are always searching for somebody who could be
    Hitler or Mussolini during WWII like Gaddafi, then you had Khomeini,
    Abu Nidal and Nasser at one point, who was described as the Mussolini
    of the Nile.

    Osama came out of the wheel of fate like everybody else did. Here's
    another one, bearded as well, mad.

    There were pictures of him. I knew a bit about him. I met him in
    Sudan for the first time. So, I did not doubt his existence. In fact,
    it was a Saudi who had been fighting with him against the Russians,
    who was attending an Islamic conference in Khartoum, who told me
    he wanted to take me on a long journey into the desert one Sunday
    because he thought I would like to meet someone. He said it was for
    my own amusement because he had never met a foreign journalist. So
    he gave me his first interview.

    I knew he was in Sudan but I never tried to see him.

    What was he like?

    He thought I was going to ask him about "terrorism, terrorism,
    terrorism" but what I wanted to ask him was about what it was like
    to fight the Russians because, Afghanistan was one of the reasons
    why the Soviet Union collapsed, and he was a very prominent fighter
    in bringing the Soviet army down. So I asked him about what it was
    like to fight the Russians. Well he told me a lot; about where the
    mass graves of his fighters were. They were not called al-Qaeda then.

    What were they called?

    Mujahidin fighters being supplied with weapons by the Americans. He
    denied that.

    They did not coin the word al-Qaeda did they?

    He used the word al-Qaeda when he announced the existence of the
    organisation before I saw him for the third time so I knew that
    then I mean I was with al-Qaeda people hours on end and I knew who
    they were but back then they weren't. His fighters were with him in
    Sudan. I met them, along with an awful lot of Sudanese intelligence
    whom they did not like very much.

    Then he told me during the course of this narrative that there was an
    attack on a Russian firebase, artillery position in this province and
    he described how during the battle a mortise shell fell at his feet
    and he said, which was quite important for me, was that he was quite
    prepared to accept death. The Arabic word he used was Sakinah which
    means calmness, tranquillity I suppose. And I asked did that moment
    play an important part in your life and he said "yes it did." It was
    very interesting. I found out how his mind worked and how fighting
    the Russians changed him.

    So that was the first time you met him?

    Yes. The second time I met him in Afghanistan.

    Was he different?

    No, he was pretty much the same. He asked to see me. I got a phone
    call from Switzerland, later on I got a call from London saying he
    wanted to see me. I was very worried because I did not know the guy
    who called me from Switzerland. I was very worried I would get set
    up by the Egytian secret service or worse the ISI or the bits of ISI
    that were not supporting the Talibans might be setting me up to be
    murdered so that they can blame it on Osama. I went to London from
    Beirut and asked to see a man who knew him in my hotel which was the
    Sheraton Belgrade in London.

    (Laughs) I remember, I was in my room. It is a very chic hotel. The
    receptionist called my room to tell me that there was a man to see me.

    I walk downstairs and as usual, the place is full of wealthy
    businessmen, women in chic clothes and standing by the reception was
    this Saudi with a huge beard in a dishdash and plastic sandals and no
    socks. And I say I bet this is the guy that wants to see me (chuckles)
    and it was of course. He said "I assure you, it is genuine." So I
    went back from Beirut to Jalalabad through Sharjah. I checked into
    the Spinghar hotel and waited and waited and waited day after day and
    I made a call to London and said hey, I am in Jalalabad. I have been
    sitting here on my bottom for ... and he said be patient. And the next
    night, I was reading in bed and there was a sound like someone with a
    car key (taps the table five times) did this on the window. I was on
    the ground floor. And the guy, with a whole load of armed men at the
    gate, took me hundreds of miles across the desert to see him which
    was where he was waiting for me. He obviously came from somewhere else.

    Every time he wanted to see you, what was it for?

    He thought I was fair in reporting what he said. I know that, well,
    first of all, he would not ask for me. I knew that because, first of
    all, he made a broadcast long after 9/11, long after we knew he was
    horrible in which he said Robert Fisk is a neutral journalist and then,
    unfortunately, he said if the White House wants to know what al-Qaeda
    thinks they need only speak to Robert Fisk which I could have lived
    without. So, Omar, Osama's son, described my meeting in Afghanistan
    in a book written about Osama's first wife and he said I had asked
    him whether if he was happy.

    He (Omar) was very moved, he was almost overwhelmed because no one had
    asked him that before. His father was domineering. He said he was very
    sorry not to find himself in the story. He was in the captions. I took
    a picture of him with his dad. And afterwards he asked Osama - aren't
    you worried that Mr Fisk would write bad things about you? Osama's
    reply was, "No, he will be fair."

    Do you think there is a group called "terrorists" or "suicide bombers"?

    I do not use the word "terrorists" in my articles. Do I think that
    they did the 9/11? George Bush is not capable of 9/11, believe me,
    it was not the American government.
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