JOURNALISTIC STANDARDS ... Canada's Public Broadcaster: 'Do NOT refer to militants, soldiers ... as 'Terrorists'
"Do not refer to militants, soldiers, or anyone else as 'terrorists'.""The notion of terrorism remains heavily politicized and is part of the story. Even when quoting/clipping a government or a source referring to fighters as 'terrorists', we should add context to ensure the audience understands this is opinion, not fact.""That includes statements from the Canadian government and Canadian politicians."George Achi, Director of Journalistic Standards, CBC"Hamas terrorists aren't a resistance, they're not freedom fighters.""They are terrorists, and no one in Canada should be supporting them, much less celebrating them."Prime Minister Justin Trudeau"It is the CBC's practice -- and it has been the practice in CBC newsrooms for over 30 years now -- to try to avoid using the words 'terror' and 'terrorist' on their own as a form of description without attribution.""I think you will find many of the leading news organizations in the western world follow a similar practice."Esther Enkin, executive editor, CBC news
Descriptions
of events and those who engage in them must reflect reality. Hamas, for
example, is a listed terrorist entity in Canada, as it is elsewhere in
the world. This is reality. Any group that deliberately and with cruel
intent inspires fear and trepidation in the minds of those they target
for annihilation is by the very fact of their actions, dedicated to
terrorism and therefore are terrorists.
According
to the tender sensibilities of the CBC, describing the SS Nazi Corps
whose mission was to oversee the annihilation of Europe's Jews, as
genocidists would be verboten.
The
memo was circulated under the name of the public broadcaster's director
of journalistic standards, cautioning CBC journalists at the same time
to forbear from referring to 2005 as "the end of the occupation" of Gaza: "as Israel has maintained control over airspace, seafront and virtually all movement into or out of the area".
The intimation being, possibly, that a country under constant violent
attack from its neighbour would do well in the opinion of this man to
remain within its porous borders and stop interfering in its neighbour's
business plan.
Opposition Conservative Senator Leo Housakos named Hamas in an X post "a blood-thirsty terrorist group", and that "The CBC doesn't have the journalistic integrity to call it as it is. That’s why common sense people in Canada have given up on CBC years ago." On Canada's terrorist list which includes Hamas, the Islamist-fascist group is described as "a radical Islamist-nationalist terrorist organization". But the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation in its journalistic wisdom begs to differ.
It
is fairly well known, unfortunately, that the CBC is not alone in its
tender regard for the feelings of a terrorist group and its ardent
followers distributed worldwide. The Associated Press espouses a similar
style of nomenclature-descriptive reportage. Its style book's most
recent edition instructs describing specific actions being perpetrated
and to attribute the use of the word terrorism or terrorist to
authorities, other than when discussing historical events widely
acknowledged as terrorist actions.
Evidently
the most recent Hamas invasion of Israel on October 7 doesn't qualify
in their opinion either as an act of pure, unadulterated, savage
terrorism. Not the slaughter of over a thousand men, women, children,
the elderly and soldiers surprised by a dawn incursion through the
security fence that was breached in 28 places as over a thousand Hamas
'freedom fighters' accompanied by Palestinian Islamic Jihad 'gunmen',
and groups of Palestinian male civilians who couldn't pass up the
opportunity to have some fun bashing Jews and looting their homes,
entered towns, villages, kibbutzim and a music festival to gorge
themselves on bloody slaughter.
Unsurprisingly
accounts of the new conflict between Israel and Hamas from the Al
Jazeera website refers to their Hamas cronies as "fighters", legitimate
combatants. What atrocities?!!!
And mother broadcaster, the venerable BBC defended its unwillingness to
use the descriptive "terrorist" following the British Defence Secretary
speaking of the policy as "verging on disgraceful".
And then there's The New York Times, called out recently in The
Washington Times through an opinion piece for changing a headline from "Hamas Terrorists" to the more genteel "Hamas Gunmen".
Terrorism and the Media, A Handbook for Journalists
released by the United Nations' Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization published in 2017 notes that the use of the word is fraught
with "emotions, memories and debate": "State
terrorism generally escapes the notice of those who try to forge a
common international definition of terrorism within intergovernmental
organizations. And yet, the word 'terrorism' comes from the Reign of
Terror perpetrated by Robespierre during the French Revolution, at the
end of the 18th Century."
In 2004 the United Nations defined "terrorist acts", as "criminal
acts, including against civilians, committed with the intent to cause
death or serious bodily injury, or taking of hostages, with the purpose
to provoke a state of terror in the general public or in a group of
persons or particular persons, intimidate a population or compel a
government or an international organization to do or to abstain from
doing any act".
Check, check, check, check, and check!
Labels: A Terrorist Is A Terrorist IS A Terrorist, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, Journalistic Integrity, Nomenclature
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