Posted by: "kalamdari" [email protected]   kalamdari 
Thu Jun 25, 2009 1:53 am (PDT) 


CNN: Fake reporting or duped by caller?
Thu, 25 Jun 2009 07:27:00 GMT

CNN and other western-based media outlets have resorted to 'unreliable' sources 
like social network websites -- such as Twitter and Facebook -- and anonymous 
callers in their coverage of Iran's post-election unrest.

In line with foreign media attempts to disrupt post-election stability in Iran, 
CNN has broadcast a false report which contradicts footages obtained by Press 
TV.

CNN broadcast an interview with a so-called anonymous witness of Wednesday's 
protest in Tehran's Baharestan Square, with the aim of depicting Iranian 
security forces as villains.

Footages obtained by Press TV reporters display some 200 protesters 'illegally' 
gathering in front of Iran's parliament at a nearby subway station to on 
Wednesday protest the result of June 12th election.

The CNN's report, however, contains a call from an alleged female witness in 
Tehran who supposedly describes the situation as the 'massacre' of protesters 
by the police in Baharestan Square.

The following is an excerpt from CNN newscaster's conversation with the alleged 
witness:

CNN: You tell us what you saw today when you tried to go to Baharestan Square?

Witness: Police stopped everyone at Sa'di. They emptied the buses that were 
taking people there and let the private cars go on.

All of a sudden 500 people with clubs and woods came out of Hedayat Mosque and 
poured into the streets. They started beating everyone and throwing them off 
Sa'di Bridge. This was a massacre.

CNN: We are not only getting this report from you. We got a report from another 
source in Tehran describing the situation today being terrible, saying people 
were being shot like animals; they beat people like animals. Are you safe right 
now?

Witness: Yes, exactly, exactly. This is what was happening. They beat people so 
bad.

However, Press TV, which is based in Tehran and was present at the scene, did 
not find even traces of the false and unfounded report.

It remains unclear, whether CNN -- which has resorted to 'unreliable' sources 
like social network websites in its coverage of Iran -- was duped by the 
'anonymous' caller or was simply faking the phone call in line with the Western 
agenda of destabilizing Iran.

Iranian officials have condemned foreign media outlets including Britain's 
state-run BBC over dramatizing the situation in the country by provoking the 
post-election violence in Iran.

Iran's Foreign Ministry Spokesman Hassan Qashqavi on Sunday pinned the blame 
for the recent post-election turmoil across the country on US and British media 
outlets.

Post-election unrests were sparked after the Interior Ministry declared 
Ahmadinejad as the president of the country for yet another four-year term by 
almost two-thirds of the vote.

People have staged rallies across the country to protest the results of the 
election. Some of the demonstrations have turned violent.

NAT/MMN

http://www.presstv. com/detail. aspx?id=99003& sectionid= 3510212




      

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