This item is available on the Middle East Forum website, at 
http://www.meforum.org/article/604



Telling the Truth about the Palestinians

by Khaled Abu Toameh

April 27, 2004



Khaled Abu Toameh, an Israeli Arab, is the West Bank and Gaza correspondent for the 
Jerusalem Post and U.S. News and World Report. He previously served as a senior writer 
for the Jerusalem Report, and a correspondent for Al-Fajr. He has produced several 
documentaries on the Palestinians for the BBC and many other networks, including ones 
that exposed the connection between Arafat and payments to the armed wing of Fatah and 
the financial corruption within the Palestinian Authority. Mr. Abu Toameh received his 
BA in English Literature from the Hebrew University and currently lives in Jerusalem 
with his wife and three children. He addressed the Middle East Forum in Philadelphia 
on April 27, 2004.



As an Arab journalist working among Palestinians, I am often asked if I feel 
threatened while I work. I am indeed frequently placed in life-threatening situations, 
yet the threats I experience do not come from the Israeli occupation, but from Yasir 
Arafat's Palestinian Authority (PA). At least 12 Palestinian journalists have been 
attacked by masked men in the past four months in what appears to be an organized 
campaign to intimidate the media. Only days ago, a photographer working for Agence 
France-Presse had his arms broken by a masked man in Ramallah. Agence France-Presse 
did not do anything about this attack, but a great outcry is raised when Israeli 
soldiers allegedly harass journalists in the territories.



The Lack of Independence in the Palestinian Media

Twenty years ago, while studying at Hebrew University in Jerusalem, I worked for the 
PLO's newspaper Al Fajr (The Dawn). Al Fajr was more than a paper; it was a PLO 
institution. At the paper we basically received and carried out orders from Arafat's 
office in Tunisia. Although I eventually became an editor there, I did not mention my 
position at Al Fajr on my resume for years because I did not consider the work that 
went on there to be real journalism. Now, after being censured for my outspokenly 
critical views of the Palestinian media, I consider my time at Al Fajr testament to my 
knowledge of the lack of journalistic freedom at the PLO newspaper.



I continue to witness what is happening to the Palestinian media under Arafat. Many of 
my Palestinian colleagues actually envy me for writing for an Israeli paper. Working 
for the PLO, I was not able to write a word of my own free will. Yet in two years at 
the Jerusalem Post my editors have never told me what to write. I can function as a 
journalist at the Jerusalem Post in a way that many Palestinians have tried to 
function under Arafat, but have failed.



Arafat's Attack on Free Speech 

When Arafat returned to the West Bank and Gaza from his exile, his security forces 
ignored pursuing terrorists and instead arrested independent journalists not loyal 
enough to the PLO. Over 38 journalists were forced out of their jobs or the country. 
This was not given much attention by the foreign media because at the time Arafat was 
allowed to do whatever he wanted in the name of Oslo. Although they did not cover the 
story heavily, I was not alone in pointing out to foreign journalists that the first 
thing Arafat did when PLO returned to the territories was to restrict freedom of 
speech.



Arafat has complete control over the Palestinian media to this day. Almost all 
Palestinian newspapers are financed by the PLO, and serve as a mouthpiece for the 
organization, which is basically Arafat's office. Some days the headlines for the 
three major Palestinians papers are identical. The lack of freedom at these papers is 
a big disappointment for Palestinian journalists; they were freer to write what they 
wanted under Israeli occupation before the PLO returned from exile.



Arafat's suppression of free speech is another example of an Arab leader not allowing 
the people to speak out. In this way Arafat is no different from other Arab dictators, 
who see the role of the media as subservient to � and a mouthpiece for � their 
regimes. In the Arab world, if you are an independent journalist or you criticize the 
regime, then you are branded a traitor � and that kind of suppression of dissent is 
how dictatorial Arab regimes survive.



Palestinian Media and their Impact on Foreign Media 

The lack of free speech in the territories should not be dismissed as an internal 
Palestinian problem. When Palestinian journalists are intimidated, it affects foreign 
journalists, who depend on Palestinians to be their guides and translators in the 
territories. When foreign journalists interview Palestinians, many translators often 
mistranslate or even reprimand Palestinian interviewees critical of the Palestinian 
Authority, and foreign journalists' ability to accurately gather facts is thus 
hampered.



Another problem with the Palestinian media is the sad fact that some Palestinian 
journalists see themselves as foot soldiers serving the revolution. These so-called 
journalists are often politically affiliated with one group or another. Under the PA, 
you basically cannot be a journalist if you are not a member of Fatah or the security 
forces. All the credible independent journalists have been fired by the three major 
Palestinian newspapers, and there are many professional Palestinian journalists, but 
they have been forced to seek work with the Arab and foreign media.



There are some in the foreign media who knowingly hire consultants or journalists who 
are really political activists, and rely heavily on them for their reporting. These 
"consultants" include former security prisoners and political activists who are hired 
by major media organizations, including American ones, who are often aware of these 
so-called journalists' problematic backgrounds. Despite the bias of their consultants, 
which inevitably affects their reporting, the media organizations keep quiet about the 
consultants' backgrounds. It is hard to say if this acquiescence by foreign media 
organizations is due to intimidation or to the need to maintain a good relationship 
with the PA, but it seriously affects the ability of journalists in the region to 
report the facts on the ground to the world.



Conclusion

People in the rest of the world therefore do not get an accurate picture of what 
happens in the region, and there are two parties to blame for this journalistic 
failure. Partly to blame are foreign journalists who allow themselves to be misled by 
some of their Palestinian consultants. The bulk of the blame, however, rests with the 
PA, whose tyrannical approach and control of the media creates an atmosphere of 
intimidation and fear among Palestinian journalists.



Summary account by Robert Blum, research assistant at the Middle East Forum







This item is available on the Middle East Forum website, at 
http://www.meforum.org/article/604







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