| Friday, May 6, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, the protests continue in  Iraq, Nouri makes some nominations, and more.   Protest continue in Iraq. They've been taking place every Friday in Iraq  since February.  Today is Situation Friday.  The Great Iraqi Revolution reports , "Tahrir  [Square], Baghdad reflects an amazing community -- one watches and listens to a  young man, a member of the Free Youth Movement, who speaks tirelessly about the  political ills and the reasons for them that exist -- everyone -- literallly  everyone listens to him and is supportive of him and his ideas.  The scene then  zooms to a mother crying heartbreakingly searching and at the same time mourning  her son who had left his home with his cousin and never returned; then to  another woman crying 'we are not terrorists - we are not terrorists - you,  Maliki, are the terrorist!' People shout and sing 'thieves' 'thieves' 'thieves'  . . . and 'liars'. They also chant everything is illegitimate and false.  These  people have been coming here every Friday since the beginning of February - they  represent all walks of life - artists, workers, civil servants, young university  students; Facebook users; mothers, fathers; lawyers; retired civil servants as  well as children.  The songs, the chants and the fervour . . . where is the  foreign press, I wonder????"  It's a cry that's been repeatedly made: Where is the media?  Why won't they  cover the protests?  Tim Arango (New York Times ) thinks they have.  Go  to last week's snapshots, I don't want to rehash that because I don't want to  pick on him. His view is the paper's view which makes them a great fit but of  little interest to those trying to follow the Iraqi people.  (The New York  Times  became the paper of record -- before Tim Arango was even born -- due  to its reliance upon officials. That's why it's unable to report on actual  movements. They are so rarely led by elected officials.)  We've tried to cover  the press silence here and also we've covered it at Third (for Third coverage,  see "Editorial: The press  covers up Iraqi protests " and "Editorial: We Heart Iraqi  Protesters "  and "Editorial: The Children  of Iraq " among other pieces.)  Today Joel Wing makes like Christopher Columbus and  'discovers ' the issue and he sees things differently which can be fine --  we're all entitled to our own viewpoints -- and it can be wrong.  I'll applaud  him for finally noting what is one of the most pressing issues even if he  completely misses the underlying causes for the lack of coverage. I won't  applaud him getting things wrong.  If you're going to include -- in your survey piece -- NPR's coverage of  Moqtada al-Sadr's protest, you cannot write "and McClatchy Newspapers never  reported on the Iraqi unrest" and be accurate. Laith Hammoudi reported on Moqtada's protest with  Jane Arraf.  Which is the other thing.  McClatchy has no one to head their  Baghdad desk and doesn't trust their stringers are reporters.  I don't mean that  as an insult to Laith, Mohammed, Sahar or anyone else there.  I think they're  reporters and I think they've demonstrated that repeatedly.  The Laith link goes  to a piece written with Jane Arraf and anyone can benefit from writing with  Jane.  But Jane's out of Iraq and is McClatchy going to do nothing?  Hannah  Allam can't head Baghdad, they've assigned her elsewhere.  The smart thing to do  would be to realize that McClatchy has strong reporters in Iraq -- the local  population -- and set them up with an editor in the US who would go over their  copy (the way editors -- in the pre-web days -- were supposed to).  But Joel  Wing is wrong about what McClatchy did or didn't do and he might want to check  some pieces that will have end note credits to McClatchy. I heard about his blog  post from a friend at CNN who was irritated that CNN got no credit for their  work.  CNN had more than the 9 he gave it credit for.  Equally strange is the  fact that he doesn't include AP.  Reuters, AFP, etc aren't US outlets.  But AP  is and readers of American newspapers  in print are more likely to have read  about the protests via AP than anything else because AP is a wire service  carried by so many outlets.  AP has done some strong coverage of the protests.   Kelly McEvers has done some for NPR (NPR gets noted by Wing) but the strongest  protest coverage was done by the Washington Post  and specifically by  Stephanie McCrummen. She did the best US coverage of the attacks on protesters  and journalists who covered the protests -- attacks after the protest had  ended.  In addition to filing stories (plural) on that (the New York  Times  did a strong editorial on the subject but the reporting section of  the paper never covered the detention and beating of journalists by Iraqi  forces), she also contributed the first and so far only -- THE ONLY -- feature  article on the protest leadership that ran in the US.  (Le Monde  had a  nice article but that was only in French, it didn't run in their English  language version.)    Joel Wing writes, "Finally, the Los Angeles Times and McClatchy Newspapers  never reported on the Iraqi unrest."  Really?  What is the basis for that  claim?  We've dealt with McClatchy already, let's move over to theLos  Angeles Times . "New Iraq protests smaller, less viollent amid tight  security ."  That March 5th article was written by Aliice Fordham and Raheem  Salman for the Los Angels Times . I don't know how Joel Wing does his  research but I do know the reaction.  I don't read Wing.  I heard about his post via a phone call from a CNN  producer who first noted how CNN's coverage was slighted.  CNN did much more  coverage than Wing gave it credit for.  And since he was wrong about that, the  reaction is to dismiss all the parts of his essay or post.  It's a bit like the  people who wrote pieces after the March protest against the illegal war on the  8th anniversary of it. A lot of people showed up making false claims in their  'analysis.'  Such as, "NPR never even mentioned the protests!"  Actually, not  only did it get some coverage after, Mara Liasson noted the protests a day  before they took place, noted them on air on NPR.  Now we can disagree with one  another on the quality of Mara's coverage and that's fine.  But we can't ignore  that NPdid mention it on air.  Not if we're claiming to be honest.      There's no point in including the Los Angeles Times at all.  The  paper had to step it down because they published stories that made Nouri  al-Malik uncomfortable.  That's not a criticism of the Los Angeles Times and  certainly not one of Ned Parker.  Joel Wing will no doubt have the facts down  for the future but the people playing catch up now are missing a huge part of  the story.   As January wound down, Ned Parker  reported on  the secret prisons for the Los Angeles Times  and Human Rights  Watch  issued their report on it.  Parker's January report on the  secret prisons and how they were run by Nouri's security forces, the Baghdad  Brigade followed up on his earlier report on how the Brigade was behind the prison that he and the paper exposed in  April 2010 .   All the while Nouri insisted that there were no secret  prisons in Iraq -- such as February 6th when Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN)  reported , "The Iraqi government on Sunday denied a human rights  organization's allegation that it has a secret detention center in Baghdad, run  by Prime Minister Nur al-Maliki's security forces." The report then quoted  Nouri's spokesperson Ali al-Moussawi stating, "We don't know how such a  respectable organization like Human Rights Watch is able to report such lies."   Camp Honor is a prison that's under Nouri's control, staffed by people working  for him.  Amnesty  International  would also call out the use of secret prisons while  Nouri continued to deny them.  And of course, Nouri was wrong.  But, honest,  seriously, swear, it was the last time.  (That's sarcasm.)  Ned Parker's article kicks off the 2011 round of protests.  Outside of  Baghdad, the most pressing issue in January and early February for protesters  was the issue of their family members being wrongfully detained and a lost in a  hidden maze.  This continues to be a key component of all the people-protests in  Iraq (as opposed to the Moqtada-ordered protests or Ahmed Chalabi silly reigonal  protest).  And it was the impetus for this year's protests.     Having written and published that strong article -- one that truly proved  the power of the press -- the Los Angeles Times followed with a lower profile  which is and has been their pattern.  I don't question that.  Everyone knows  Nouri is hostile to journalism and that he and his cronies are litigious (see  many, many lawsuits but especially Nouri's defamation suit against England's the  Guardian in 2009  which, thankfully, the newspaper won on appeal in January of this  year .).  A step back, a lower profile, for a bit is in keeping with the  pattern the paper long ago set in their coverage of Iraq.   April 12th ,  Amnesty  International issued the report [PDF format warning] "DAYS OF RAGE: PROTESTS AND REPRESSION IN  IRAQ "  and it provides an overview of the protests.  I'm confused by Wing's claim that "Iraq held its first protest on January  30, 2011." That's wrong.  It's incorrect.  That was not the first protest in  2011 by any means.  I have no idea why Joel Wing can't get the facts correct but  the easiest way to prove him wrong is to quote this passage from January 20,  2011:   Protests against Iraq's troubled electricity network have spread to  the north. In Tamim province there was a street demonstration against the lack  of power. The governor also announced that electricity produced locally would be  used for the governorate's own use, rather than be sent to Baghdad. Tamim joins  seven other provinces that have complained about the troubled power network in  the last several months.
 Clearly a January 20th protests is  prior to January 30th so Joel Wing is wrong.  And for those who might say,  "C.I., maybe Joel Wing doesn't consider the source of that passage trust  worthy?"  He may not.  There are people who do not trust themselves. Maybe Joel  Wing is one of them.  But he wrote that passage, it's from his January 20th  entry "Electricity Protests Spread To Northern Iraq ."   Since he wrote it, he must agree with it, right? So I have no idea why he'd  write that in January and then ignore it in May.  January 16th (still before  January 30th), Reidar Visser (Iraq and Gulf Analysis)  reported  "More Kurdish Protests against the budget.        On this end, I've called Wing out because (a) he's wrong and undercounted a  number of outlets (including CNN) and also because doing this draws attention to  media criticism which interests the press (if it weren't for self-love,  sometimes the press would have no love at all) and may help draw more attention  to the ongoing Iraqi protests in the long run.   One serious slam I will hit Wing with is, "How do you write about the media  silence on the protests on a day when protests are taking place and not note  that fact?"         |