http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/story.jsp?story=91992



CNN caves in to Israel over its references to illegal settlements

By Robert Fisk, Middle East Correspondent

03 September 2001

Just as the BBC last month ordered its reporters to use the phrase "targeted
killings'' for Israel's assassination of Palestinians, CNN ­ under constant
attack from right-wing Jewish pro-settler lobby groups ­ has instructed its
journalists to stop referring to Gilo as a "Jewish settlement''. Instead,
they must call the settlement, built illegally on occupied Arab land outside
Jerusalem, "a Jewish neighbourhood".

Arabs have long protested over CNN's reporting of the Middle East ­
especially its pejorative use of the word "terrorist'' ­ but they are likely
to be outraged by this latest "softening" of the station's reporting in
Israel's favour. Some of the land on which Gilo is built was taken from the
Palestinians of Beit Jala ­ Gilo is Hebrew for Jala ­ but no hint of this
historical background will be permitted on CNN. Israeli soldiers in Gilo have
been involved in nightly battles with Palestinian gunmen in Beit Jala.

The instruction from CNN's headquarters in Atlanta is straightforward. "We
refer to Gilo as 'a Jewish neighbourhood on the outskirts of Jerusalem, built
on land occupied by Israel in 1967','' the order states. "We don't refer to
it as a settlement.''

This extraordinary climbdown in favour of the Israelis follows months of
internal debate in CNN, which has been constantly criticised by CNN Watch,
honestreporting.com and other pro-Israeli pressure groups in the United
States which monitor all its reports on the Middle East.

Many journalists at CNN headquarters are angered by the new instruction.
"There's a feeling by some people here that what we are doing is searching
for euphemisms for what is really happening," one of them told The
Independent yesterday. "We've managed to eliminate the word 'terrorism' ­ we
now talk about 'militants' ­ because we know that the word 'terrorist' is
used by one side or another to damage the other side. But now there's
pressure on us not to use the word 'settler' in any context ­ but to just
refer to the settlers as 'Israelis'."

In the past, CNN used "terrorist" only about Arabs ­ the Israeli settler who
murdered 29 Palestinians in a Hebron mosque in 1994 was always called an
"extremist" on CNN ­ and at one point described Arab protests at the illegal
settlements built by Jews on Palestinian land as "conflicting heritage"
claims.

However, by censoring the word "settlement" for Gilo, CNN is perpetrating a
lie. Gilo was illegally annexed by Israel after the 1967 war ­ not just
"occupied" as CNN wishes its viewers to believe ­ and far from being a
"neighbourhood on the outskirts of Jerusalem", it was built on land which
Israel ­ again illegally ­ used to extend the boundaries of Jerusalem.

"There has been an intense internal debate over the use of words," the CNN
reporter said. "And sometimes we still do use the word 'settlement' about
Gilo. In fact, we don't necessarily say all that stuff about 'occupied by
Israel in 1967'. But we're having problems. There are many small pro-settler
Jewish groups who're trying to win the war of words."

A CNN spokesman in Atlanta said last night: "We have no response to make to
you. We don't want to get into a discussion on this ... In fact we'd rather
not say anything about this at all."


* Israeli soldiers killed two Palestinians in gun battles in the West Bank
city of Hebron yesterday, creating a violent backdrop for the arrival of the
European Union's foreign policy representative, Javier Solana. He was due to
help lay the groundwork for a meeting between the Palestinian President,
Yasser Arafat, and Israel's Foreign Minister, Shimon Peres, which might be
held in Italy at the end of the week.


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