Friday, November 07, 2008

Palestine ranks low on Press Freedom due to factional fighting - By Rashid Shahin

Maan News

We don’t know how many Palestinian Authority officials in the West Bank and the de facto government in the Gaza Strip have read the report by the French organization Reporters Without Borders which labeled Palestine as one of the worst countries in the world in terms of freedom of press. Nor do we know what the reaction of those who might have read the report was. If we suppose that some officials read the report we must assume that they did not care, since no mention of Palestine’s disastrous ranking has been mentioned.

This is especially striking since the report by Reporters Without Borders named the main cause for press censorship in Palestine as the political rivalry in the Palestinian arena. If the political rivalry is to blame for press censorship, than the governments in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip must then take full responsibility for the issue.

Palestine’s ranking in the World Press Freedom Index has been slowly dropping since 2004, when it stood at number 127 out of 167 countries. The following year it dropped five places to 132, then another two places to 134. In 2007 Palestine dropped 27 places to 158, and then another five places to 163 in 2008.

The reduction in press freedom also means that democracy has been reduced to a marginal issue, though it was operative before the Hamas-Fatah disagreement. It is true that the situation was not ideal before 2007, and nobody is seeking idealism as in the renowned western democracies. However, what we request is that the situation in Palestine be better than bottom-of-the-list régimes, many of which watch even the breathing of their citizens.

There are several indications that freedoms have decreased despite the progress in Palestinian experience. This is the result of disagreement which has not only harmed freedom of the press, but also the Palestinian cause as a whole.

Everybody knows about the tit-for-tat ban on newspaper distribution in both the West Bank and Gaza. Everybody knows how press institutions were mutually closed as hasty reactions by each side to the others wrong doing. Everybody knows how journalists were oppressed and assaulted in the West bank and Gaza while they attempted to cover events. Thus, there is no doubt it is disagreement which caused the retreat in freedoms and in other aspects related to authority, and it is the deep-rooted perception of this authority in our oriental minds.

One glance at the reports and news which have been written from within Palestine explains why journalists tackle only the outside layers of issues without daring to penetrate into their core; they are afraid of being pursued and assaulted. The reason for that is the absence of laws which protect journalists, and if there are such laws, they are not in effect.

There is no doubt that the situation in Palestine is special. It is a weird formula, where there is neither a state in the real sense of the word nor a liberated land. The situation has remained for many years undefined. When the whole situation is foggy –when the people are a state and the state is its fractured people - all issues become foggy and utter confusion prevails. It becomes very difficult to distinguish between private and public, between security and chaos. This is a fertile soil for financial, administrative, judicial and even moral corruption.

Freedom of the press means a certain level of professionalism in reporting the news and a certain level of authenticity in what is reported; credibility and an ease in getting good news to press. Impartiality and objectivity are also essential. These factors among others can lead to free and impartial journalism which will be able to counter the enemy’s media which can turn the truth upside down and can forge and steel history, geography and even claim ownership of our traditional foods like falafel, Hummus and Fool.

Freedom of press in Palestine might be seen as good compared to some Arab countries, but the comparison is not a just one, since we must compare to those who are excellent and not at the bottom of the barrel.

We don’t demand freedom of press like that in Sweden, although we hope for that. All we demand is freedom of the press and media coverage without being afraid of being accused of partiality and even of treason by those who disagree with our standpoint.

We need to put an end to that wave of violence against journalists for simple and strait forward coverage of events; it is an attempt to take us back to the 1960s when Palestinians used to learn the news about their own country through foreign radio stations and other media outlets.

There should be a bridge of trust between journalists and officials, and journalists should receive information without any attempts to change information. This way, the journalist will not need find information from enemy sources. Nobody, then, could oppose freedom of press unless he has something to worry about which means wrong practices and illegal doings.


***Rashid Shahin is a Palestinian journalist who lives and works in Ramallah.

(This article was originally written in Arabic for Ma'an News Agency and translated into English)

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