Monday, April 12, 2010

Media Watchdog Group: Gag-Orders Still Important & Effective


Hillel Fendel
A7 News

Media watchdog organization Israel's Media Watch (IMW) has released a statement on the media issues that have arisen in the wake of the Haaretz document theft-and-leak spy case. The case, publicized last week, involves the alleged theft by journalist Anat Kam, a former army clerk, of over 2,000 IDF documents, many of which were secret and top-secret, and subsequent handing them over to a Haaretz journalist for use in a manner that the IDF deemed harmful to security interests. The case was kept under gag-order for some three months, despite media pressures, in order that, as Israel Security Agency head Yuval Diskin explained, every effort to retrieve the documents be exhausted. He said that he agreed to withdraw the request for a gag order once Haaretz and its reporter Uri Blau refused to agree to the proposed arrangement, which stipulated lack of usage of the documents to prosecute the reporter and the soldier-journalist.

Diskin said it is the dream of all of Israel’s enemies to get their hands on the documents in question.

IMW stated as follows:

“The media is required ethically to fight, using the tools at its disposal (such as the Supreme Court), to be able to bring information to the public, using lawful means only. Every attempt to bypass the law in the name of freedom of the press and democracy is a crime, and must be related to as such.

“We continue to call on the public at large to utilize its consumer strength to support those media outlets in which it believes, and alternatively, to stay away from law-breaking media – both by not buying law-breaking newspapers and by not advertising in or supporting them in any way.

“IMW rejects the claim that given today’s technological reality, there is no justification to military censorship and gag-orders. These tools continue to remain vital and effective. In this case, the proof is that it took from December 2009, when the case began, until the beginning of April 2010 for it to start ‘leaking out.’

“A democracy can and infrequently must implement these tools in order to protect itself and its citizens. It is up to the courts to ascertain that these tools are not abused. There is room to time-restrict the use of these tools."Israel’s Media Watch, according to its website, aims to “strengthen and actualize Israel’s democracy by informing the Israeli public about Israel’s media and the extent to which they abide by the media codes of ethics, decency and objectivity in reporting.”

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