“We Muslims Need to Understand That Israel is ABOVE ALL INTERNATIONAL LAW 
Thanks to the US. It Makes Its Own Rules & Can Operate With IMPUNITY & Has ZERO 
Accountability. The UN (Usual Noise) Cannot Rein It In. Therefore We Need to 
Follow a SEPARATE Set of Robust RULES OF ENGAGEMENT In All Areas When DEALING 
With It.” – AB
  Israel Manipulates The Media - While Muslims Pretend To Be Holy
   
  http://www.mpacuk.org/content/view/6/1474/105/
   
  MPACUK Comment: Recently, an AP Cameraman filmed footage of a War Crime - the 
shooting of a Palestinian boy by an Israeli soldier. The footage was submitted 
to the Israel Bureau of the AP but was erased before broadcast. A clear example 
of Israeli influence, competence one might say, over a global news provider. 
Contrast this with Muslims, often more concerned with arranging talks, nasheed 
concerts and study circles, instead engaging with the Global Village that is 
Politics and the Media.
   
  Read the article below:
   
  In the midst of journalism's "Sunshine Week" - during which the Associated 
Press and other news organizations are valiantly proclaiming the public's 
"right to know" - Associated Press (AP) insists on conducting its own 
activities in the dark, and refuses to answer even the simplest questions about 
its system of international news reporting.
   
  Most of all, it refuses to explain why it erased footage of an Israeli 
soldier intentionally shooting a Palestinian boy.
   
  AP, according to its website, is the world's oldest and largest news 
organization. It is the behemoth of news reporting, providing what its editors 
determine is the news to a billion people each day. Through its feeds to 
thousands of newspapers, radio and television stations, AP is a major 
determinant in what Americans read, hear and see - and what they don't.
   
  What they don't is profoundly important. I investigated one such omission 
when I was in the Palestinian Territories last year working on a documentary 
with my colleague (and daughter), who was filming our interviews.
   
  On Oct. 17, 2004 Israeli military forces invaded Balata, a dense, 
poverty-stricken community deep in Palestine's West Bank (Israel frequently 
invades this area and others). According to witnesses, the vehicles stayed for 
about twenty minutes, the military asserting its power over the Palestinian 
population. The witnesses state that there was no Palestinian resistance - no 
"clash," no "crossfire," not even any stone-throwing. At one point, after most 
of the vehicles had finally driven away, an Israeli soldier stuck his gun out 
of his armored vehicle, aimed at a pre-pubescent boy nearby, and pulled the 
trigger.
   
  We went to the hospital and interviewed the boy, Ahmad, his doctors, family, 
and others. Ahmad had bandages around his lower abdomen, where surgeons had 
operated on his bladder. He said he was afraid of Israeli soldiers, and pulled 
up his pants leg to show where he had been shot previously. In the hospital 
there was a second boy, this one with a shattered femur; and a third boy, this 
one in critical condition with a bullet hole in his lung. A fourth boy, not a 
patient, was visiting a friend. He showed us a scarred lip and missing teeth 
from when Israeli soldiers had shot him in the mouth.
   
  This was not an unusual situation. When I had visited Palestinian hospitals 
on a previous trip, I had seen many such victims; some with worse injuries. 
Yet, very few Americans know this is going on. 
   
  AP's actions in regard to Ahmad's shooting may explain why. We discovered 
that an AP cameraman had filmed the entire incident. This cameraman had then 
followed what apparently is the usual routine. He sent his video - an extremely 
valuable commodity, since it contained documentary evidence of a war crime - to 
the AP control bureau for the region. This bureau is in Israel.
   
  What happened next is unfathomable. Did AP broadcast it? No. Did AP place the 
video in safe-keeping, available for an investigation of this crime? No. 
According to its cameraman, AP erased it. We were astounded. We traveled to 
AP's control bureau in Israel. With our own video camera out and running, we 
asked bureau chief Steve Gutkin about this incident. Was the information we had 
been told correct, or did he have a different version? Did the bureau have the 
video, or had they indeed erased it. If so, why?
   
  Gutkin, repeatedly looking at the camera and visibly flustered, told us that 
AP did not allow its journalists to give interviews. He told us that all 
questions must go to Corporate Communications, located in New York. He 
explained that they were on deadline and couldn't talk. I said I understood 
deadline pressure, and sat down to wait until they were done. When he called 
Israeli police to arrest us, we left.
   
  Back in the US later, I phoned Corporate Communications and reached Director 
of Media Relations Jack Stokes, AP's public relations spokesman. I had 
conversed with Stokes before.
   
  Over the past several years I have noticed disturbing flaws in AP coverage of 
Israel-Palestine: newsworthy stories not being covered, reports sent to 
international newspapers but not to American ones, stories omitting or 
misreporting significant facts, critical sentences being removed from updated 
reports.
   
  I would phone AP with the appropriate correction or news alert. One time this 
resulted in a flawed news story being slightly corrected in updates. In a few 
cases stories were then covered that had been neglected. In many cases, 
however, I was told that I needed to speak to Corporate Communications. I would 
phone Corporate Communications, leave a message, and wait for a response. Most 
often, none came.
   
  Several times, however, I was able to have long conversations with AP 
spokesman Stokes. None of these conversations, however, ever ended with AP 
taking any action. Some typical responses:
   
  The omitted story was "not newsworthy."  The story deemed by AP editors to be 
newsworthy to the rest of the world - e.g. Israel's brutal imprisonment of over 
300 Palestinian youths - was not newsworthy in the US (Israel's major ally). 
Burying a report of Israeli forces shooting a four-year-old Palestinian girl in 
the mouth was justified. Misreporting an incident in which an Israeli officer 
riddled a 13-year-old girl at close range with bullets was unimportant. 
   
  Despite this unresponsive pattern, when I learned firsthand of an AP bureau 
erasing footage of an atrocity, I again phoned Corporate Communications. I no 
longer had much expectation that AP would take any corrective action, but I did 
expect to receive some information. I gave spokesperson Stokes the numerous 
details about this incident that we had gathered on the scene and asked him the 
same questions I had asked Gutkin. He said he would look into this and get back 
to me.
   
  After several days he had not gotten back to me, so I again phoned him. He 
said that he had looked into this incident, and that AP had determined that 
this was "an internal matter" and that they would give no response. While I 
should have known better, I was again astounded. AP was blatantly violating 
fundamental journalistic norms of ethical behavior, and clearly felt it had the 
power to get away with it.
   
  Journalism, according to the Statement of Principles of the American Society 
of Newspaper Editors, is a "sacred trust." It is the bulwark of a free society 
and is so essential to the functioning of a democracy that our forefathers 
affirmed its primacy in the very first amendment of the Bill of Rights. 
According to the Society of Professional Journalists, one of the four major 
pillars of journalistic ethics is to "Be Accountable." According to the SPJ's 
Code of Ethics:
   
  ·        "Journalists are accountable to their readers, listeners, viewers 
and each other.
  ·        "Journalists should:
  ·        Clarify and explain news coverage and invite dialogue with the 
public over journalistic conduct. 
  ·        Encourage the public to voice grievances against the news media. 
  ·        Admit mistakes and correct them promptly. 
   
  Expose unethical practices of journalists and the news media. 
  
Abide by the same high standards to which they hold others." 
  
Finally, this week, on deadline with a chapter about media coverage of 
Israel-Palestine, I again tried to confirm some of my facts with AP. Certainly, 
I felt, during "Sunshine Week" AP would respond. As part of the Sunshine 
campaign, AP's CEO and President Tom Curley is traveling the country giving 
speeches on the necessity of transparency and accountability (for government) 
and emphasizing "the openness that effective democracy requires."
   
  "The trend toward secrecy," AP's President has correctly been pointing out, 
"is the greatest threat to democracy."
   
  I emailed my questions to AP, talked to Stokes by phone, and again was told 
he would get back to me. Again, I got back to him. Then, in a surreal exchange, 
he conveyed AP's reply: "The official response is we decline to respond." As I 
asked question after question, many as simple as a confirmation of the number 
of bureaus AP has in Israel-Palestine, the response was silence or a repetition 
of: "The official response is we decline to respond."
   
  The next day I tried phoning AP's President Curley directly. I was unable to 
reach him, since he was on the road giving his Sunshine Week speeches 
("Secrecy," Curley says, "is for losers"), but I left a message for him with an 
assistant. She said someone would respond.
   
  I am still waiting.
   
  It is clearly time to go to AP's superiors. The fact is, AP is a cooperative. 
It is not owned by Corporate Communications spokespeople or by its CEO or even 
by its board of directors. It is owned by the thousands of newspapers and 
broadcast stations around the United States that use AP reports. These 
newspapers, radio and television stations are the true directors of AP, and 
bear the responsibility for its coverage.
   
  In the end, it appears, the only way that Americans will receive full, 
unbiased reporting from AP on Israel-Palestine will be when these member-owners 
demand such coverage from their employees in the Middle East and in New York. 
As long as AP's owners remain too busy or too negligent to ensure the quality 
and accuracy of their Israel-Palestine coverage, the handful of people within 
AP who are distorting its news reporting on this tragic, life-and-death, 
globally destabilizing issue will quite likely continue to do so.
   
  In the final analysis, therefore, it is up to us - members of the public - to 
step in. Everyone who believes that Americans have the right and the need to 
receive full, undistorted information on all issues, including 
Israel-Palestine, must take action. We must require our news media to fulfill 
their profoundly important obligation, and we must ourselves distribute the 
critical information our media are leaving out.
   
  If we don't take action, no one else will.
   
  AP can be reached at 212-621-1500
   
  Tom Curley is the CEO of Associated Press and can be reached via his 
secretary's email [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
   
  Former journalist Alison Weir is Executive Director of If Americans Knew, 
which is currently conducting a statistical analysis of AP's coverage of 
Israel-Palestine, to be released within a few months. The organization has 
created cards that describe AP actions for people to disseminate in their 
communities.
   
  AB                                                                            
                             [EMAIL PROTECTED]                                  
                                                                    "For to us 
will be their return; then it will be for us to call them to account." (Holy 
Quran 88:25-26)

 
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