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<http://www.arabisto.com/p_blogEntry.cfm?blogID=7&blogEntryID=559>
&blogEntryID=559
Al Hurra, the new "terror" network financed by America 
 
May 18, 2007 11:36 AM 
 
It's interesting to watch the controversy over Al Hurra, the American funded
"public diplomacy" station aimed at Arabic speaking audiences abroad, unfold
in a parallel way to that of Al Jazeera, a nominally independent
Qatari-funded station aimed at the same audience. Both were seen as beacons
of freedom and hope when they began, but within a few years both became
vilified as beacons of hatred and terror. Perhaps the fact that they aim to
be credible news organizations that cover the events, people, and policies
that matter to their audience has been most responsible  
  
 
for the about-face in public perception. The fact is that Al Hurra has
adapted to the imperatives of competition it faces in the Arab world, and
thus adapted to those audience expectations and styles of journalism. For
example, Arabic news is not limited to the ten-second sound bite. Officials,
politicians and such are allowed reasonable time to explain themselves and
include context in their statements to the media. They don't have to boil
down their speeches or take-aways to a few seconds of blather as they do on
American news, which can't seem to spend more than 30 seconds on any one
person. Yet as Al Hurra has sought to gain credibility with its  target Arab
audience, it has lost credibility at home among its American sponsors.
Ironically, though, they are in the same catch-22 as they are in with Al
Jazeera, they can't understand what is being said, and must rely on
translators to tell them what the broadcasts say. According to a recent
article, which I will quote in length below, there is a proposal to stream
Al Hurra live online and provide transcripts, a proposal that challenges the
logic of the law preventing the government from broadcasting such material
(propaganda it says) to the American public, this includes Voice of America,
Radio Marit (our Cuban counterpart to Radio Sawa), and other such "public
diplomacy" efforts. Of course, maybe in the 21st century such national
boundaries on information don't make sense. Anyway, the article, below
highlights the controversy over programming and leadership, and it worth a
read:
 

On March 12 in a Wall Street Journaleditorial, Joel Mowbray detailed how
Al-Hurra, under the leadership of former CNN producer Larry Register, had
turned "into a platform for Islamic terrorists." In a May 8 follow-up
editorial in Power Line, Mowbray follows Register's reaction to his
editorial arguing that Al-Hurra's news director, Register, and his boss
Brian Conniff, president of the network's parent company, the Middle East
Broadcasting Network "hoodwinked Secretary of State Condi Rice,
Undersecretary of State Karen Hughes, the Broadcasting Board of Governors
[BBG], and Congress," by downplaying the extent to which the television
network aired a controversial speech by Hezbollah leader Hasan Nasrallah.
Mowbray argues that Register originally assured press that only part of the
speech, in which Nasrallah denied the Holocaust, aired before the network
cut away. Mowbray also alludes to memos of Conniff to the BBG, Rice, and
Congress in which Conniff consistently varies the actual air time of the
speech, ranging from 25 to 60 minutes. Mowbray states that DVDs of the
broadcast provided to Congress provide evidence that Al-Hurra carried the
entire speech of 68 minutes and the network never cut away.
 
 
 

In a Wall Street Journal editorial on May 9, BBG Chairman of the Middle East
Committee Joaquin Blaya offers a rebuttal of Mowbray's March 12 editorial.
He argues that "Al-Hurra is filling a void in the Middle East by providing
accurate information about America, and by addressing issues absent on other
Arab news stations including free speech, human rights, woman empowerment,
and government accountability - all building blocks for freedom and
democracy."
 
 
 

Blaya admits that the Tehran Holocaust conference, in which Nasrallah spoke,
"should not have aired" but argues that the coverage was "not indicative of
an editorial position." Whereas Mowbray in an interview with The Journal
Editorial Report of the Wall Street Journal states that Al-Hurra covered the
conference like a "puff piece.there was no rebuttal. There's no independent
debunking. These guys were put on almost like an infomercial," Blaya tried
to demonstrate that the conference was surrounded by broadcasts of
countering views. Blaya writes, "When one examines the totality of
Al-Hurra's coverage over the past five months, one would find that in the
days following the Holocaust conference Al-Hurra presented the condemnation
of the conference by countries such as Israel, Britain, Italy, Germany and
the United States." Additionally the author mentions a report that followed
members of the Washington, DC Muslim community on a visit to the Holocaust
Museum in which they express solidarity with the victims. The station also
provided live coverage of President Bush's remarks on Holocaust Remembrance
Day as well as Prime Minister Olmert's comments from Israel.
 
 
 

"We have learned from our errors and have instituted improved editorial
controls. For example, an assignment desk was established in early March
that monitors and flags material as is received from the field," writes
Blaya, asserting Al-Hurra's commitment to covering human rights abuses and
providing balanced reporting.
 
 
 

In response to this controversy, Rep. Steve Rothman (NJ-9) in the New Jersey
Jewish Standardcalled for the creation of an external advisory board for
Al-Hurra.
 
 
 

"While I am pleased with Ms. Hughes' promises, given the seriousness of
mistakes at Al-Hurra, I believe an external accountability system is in
order - one that enables everyone to access Al-Hurra's programming and
provide oversight. To that end, I have requested funding in the Fiscal Year
2008 Foreign Operations spending bill to stream all Al-Hurra broadcasts live
online 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, and provide archived broadcasts, as
well as transcripts of all broadcasts translated into English. With the
click of a mouse button, we can ensure that Al-Hurra lives up to its mission
of representing America values."
 
 
 

Rothman also called for the immediate dismissal of Register. "By removing
the present leadership at Al-Hurra and by making its programming accessible
and understandable to those who pay for it - the American people - we can
begin to fix Al-Hurra. And, we can make sure that terrorists are not given a
free pass to use our own airwaves against us." 
 


 



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