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13/01/2009
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Be honest, Saudis tell Western media 
Hassna’a Mokhtar I Arab News 


JEDDAH: Journalism ethics across the world demand journalists be
unbiased, objective and accurate while reporting news. However, these
rules are often ignored when the international media report on Saudi
Arabia, Arabs or Muslims.

“There is a misconception and misunderstanding about Saudi Arabia,
women’s rights in the Kingdom, the freedom of the press and other
issues. Many Western journalists are ignorant. They base their
information on negative stereotypes and insist on portraying the same
images without reporting objectively,” said Maha Akeel, managing editor
of The Journal, the print magazine of the Organization of the Islamic
Conference.

Akeel said foreign reporters who visit the Kingdom admit their surprise
at the good they see but fail to report them. “They don’t report that.
They assume we only want to trick them,” said Akeel.

Fiona Hill, an Australian anthropologist and executive officer of the
Australia-Arab Chamber of Commerce and Industry, said people default to
stereotypes. “That’s what media outlets default to. Humans by nature
default to stereotypes. Also, some reporters are governed by editors who
are governed by their bosses who head monopolies. We have some serious
issues with media monopoly in the world. It’s an open fact,” said Hill.

The stereotypical images about Saudi Arabia and Saudis are not
fictional. “Stereotypes don’t fall out of the sky. They come out of
reality,” she said, explaining that society is dynamic and organic. “It
is not static, so some of what is portrayed in the media is a reflection
of Saudi society, but it’s not the only reflection,” added Hill.

In a recent bold advertisement campaign, entitled “Rahma” (Mercy),
Kaswara Al-Khatib, managing director of Full Stop Advertising, created a
series of TV advertisements highlighting the abuse of foreign domestic
workers to encourage people to show their employees respect.

“But the Western media’s concern was to create a big bang and not be
honest and share everything,” said Al-Khatib. “No one said that the
campaign was a positive step to admitting one’s mistakes. They focused
only on what’s controversial and negative. They took my words out of
context,” he said, advising the international media to “be honest and
share everything.”

Menwer Al-Haraki, uncle of a 19-year-old Syrian schoolboy beaten to
death by two Canadians and a Jordanian in a schoolyard brawl in Jeddah,
was “disgusted” when Canada’s Globe and Mail newspaper misrepresented
his quotes. The uncle, who spoke to the newspaper on behalf of the boy’s
father because he was fluent in English, was inaccurately quoted as
saying the father intended to forgive his son’s killers with certain
conditions

“It was untrue and misleading. The reporter’s job is to accurately quote
people and not give false information. People’s rights could be at
stake. However, these people wanted to offend the Kingdom in anyway
possible,” said Al-Haraki.

In February 2006, an Austrian court sentenced British historian David
Irving to three years for denying the Holocaust. In December 2007, Saudi
Fouad Al-Farhan was arrested in Jeddah for comments he made on his
website.

“Why was the case of Al-Farhan covered extensively and critically in
Western media outlets and not the case of Irving when both were arrested
for practicing freedom of speech?” asked Khaled Abdullah, a 35-year-old
IT employee. “Western media has double standard. It scrutinizes
everything Saudi Arabia does, but it doesn’t go near anything related to
what is sensitive to the Jews.”

Reem Talal, a 24-year-old MA student in Chicago, said Saudi Arabia is
frequently misrepresented in the international media. “Saudi Arabia is
frequently viewed as an oppressive country. A country that doesn’t give
women their rights and where every man has an oil well in his backyard,”
said Reem.

“It’s exaggerated and overblown to the point where people who’ve never
been outside their respective countries and who don’t have any sort of
acquaintances from the Kingdom don’t know the truth and just think that
Saudi Arabia is full of terrorists.”

But why would Western media outlets report biased and inaccurate
information about Saudi Arabia or Saudis despite their media ethics
demanding high standards of journalism?

“There are many reasons why a newspaper or media institution would want
to deliberately present a false image about Saudi Arabia. Some might be
careless in their research and collection of data. Some might have their
own agendas. All I know is that problems that exist in Saudi Arabia
exist everywhere,” said Jowhara Al-Angari, founding member of the
National Society for Human Rights.

In her book “Culturally Speaking: Promoting Cross-Cultural Awareness in
a Post-9/11 World,” American writer Mary Coons said many Americans feel
the Islamic world is their enemy. “But the Islamic world is not our
enemy. Ignorance is our enemy,” she wrote.

Coons, who travels extensively to Bahrain where she spends about five
months in a year, quotes people she interviewed in the book saying that
the American media show and tell Americans only what the media want them
to know.

“I think we have all learned to take everything we hear with a pinch of
salt,” said American Michelle LaGue. 

“If you are proactive, and you really want to know the real story, you
can find out.”

Joan Corey agreed. “The same thing can be said for newspapers. Certain
newspapers are more politically leaning toward one type versus the
other, as are most television news stations.”

“The problem with the Western journalists is that their way of thinking
is quite different from ours,” said Turki Al-Dakheel. “The main problem
is that they try to compare us with their lifestyle in the West,” he
said

Although these journalists talk about the importance of democracy, they
are not aware of the fact that many people in the Kingdom are happy with
their present life that draws Western criticism.

“We think that we present Western journalists a glittering picture of
Saudi Arabia by talking about positive aspects. Later we come to know
that they had spoken to others and understood other faces of the
country,” he pointed out.

“We should understand that our society is more open to others than
before ... We hope they would try to understand us more and find out
that there are different groups of people amongst us including
rightists, leftists and moderates,” he explained.

“We are a new society. We have distinguished qualities as well as
defects. We are not just evil as we are not always angels. We are a mix
of both. We hope they would try to understand us in the right manner,”
he added.

According to a study done by King Saud University, entitled
“Misrepresentation of the Arabs in the Western Media,” Arabs are
currently seen as terrorists and murderers in the Western media.
“Mistrust and abhorrence have become American common feelings toward the
distorted image of Arabs. The unconscious wish not to separate
stereotypes from reality governs every aspect of Arab-Western
relations... Why do western thinkers insist on misrepresentations of
Muslims and Arabs?”. 
        
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