http://www.arabnews.com/?page=9&section=0&article=62535&d=22&m=4&y=2005&pix=community.jpg&category=Features

Friday, 22, April, 2005 (13, Rabi` al-Awwal, 1426)


      Journalism in Saudi Arabia: A Personal Thought
      Roger Harrison, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
     
        
      Journalists: Custodians of a nation's integrity? Sand in the shoe? 
Opinion formers? Pains in the neck or a carcinogenic excrescence on the lucent 
face of a perfect society?

      It all depends on the circumstances. Much as boxing is defined as "the 
noble art" when the reality is two very fit people each trying to batter the 
other unconscious, journalists frequently ascribe noble motives to what is at 
base a simple task: Reporting.

      That said, getting to the stage where the reporting can be done is often 
more like a boxing match in its physicality than the cerebral pursuit one might 
imagine. Involvement with the "rat pack" of press that flocculates around 
anyone who, if only for a few minutes, is newsworthy often yields bruises and 
scratches as badges of honor to be carried back to the newsroom for sympathetic 
cooing by editors. They within seconds blow the facade of their concern by 
asking "Did you get the story?"

      In Saudi Arabia, the "rat pack" is a little less aggressive than 
elsewhere, although the odd hefty shove in the back or an "accidental" spillage 
of hot tea down a trouser leg to make a space for a competitor is not unknown. 
And those are your journalistic brethren.

      There is no denying it; Saudi Arabia is a naturally secretive society. 
Questions about newsworthy events such as arrests, shootings - the stuff of 
local news elsewhere - are frequently met with blandishments or confected 
stories that yield little information or much in the way of checkable fact.

      Security concerns aside, even high-profile events in the public gaze 
attract a neurosis about security bordering on the psychotic. The pair of 
symbolic explosions in stolen cars parked outside a couple of banks on Sept. 
11, 2004 is a case in point.

      Streets closed off, police cars littered with gay abandon across the 
cityscape and crowds of patient onlookers staring at the scene on Tahlia 
Street. The moment a camera came into view, sharp faced gents with radios the 
size of house-bricks quite literally attacked me; one furious at being denied 
possession of the camera stamped on his foot so hard it broke my toe.

      A warehouse fire with half a dozen fire appliances and several other 
photographers snapping the flames and the sterling efforts of the fire service 
produced a policeman with bad attitude and a Kalashnikov. His initial efforts 
failed to get the camera away from me and ended with my being punched inside my 
vehicle and an expensive Nikon damaged. His charming colonel sorted the 
situation out when the officer discovered that even this behavior was going to 
leave him empty-handed - but left me with a broken camera and a couple of cuts. 
Generally speaking, our policemen are wonderful; at least, when you get high 
enough up the chain of command. Whatever happens at patrolman level is referred 
up the chain to a courteous colonel or similar and, once a relationship has 
been established, the situation is resolved. Nine or so confrontations in as 
many months have been resolved inside police cars in periods varying from one 
to three hours.

      I quote in a slightly different context the disingenuous advice in an 
online journalism course, "Somewhere right now ... a journalism professor is 
telling a student, 'Don't get involved with the subject of your stories.'" Now 
you know how wrong or impossible to follow that advice really is.

      The culture of suspicion and secrecy over quite ordinary inquiries or 
events pervades the whole public service structure. Official statistics are 
frequently hard to get and even harder to verify independently - a basic 
requirement of any news writer. Cameras in the most innocent situations - 
except when a local worthy wants his picture in the paper - frequently cause an 
allergic reaction among security or police forces. Once, aggressed by an armed 
policeman while photographing the Jeddah fountain at night - lit by spotlights 
and towering 260 meters above the Corniche and admired by crowds of thousands - 
I was told under no circumstances to take pictures of it; it was secret. Five 
meters away Saudi families were photographing exactly the same thing.

      Transparency - in many areas of genuine public interest - is a concept 
neither understood nor practiced. It is the major challenge to operating as a 
journalist in the Kingdom and reporting news.

      It is the reporting of actuality rather than confected reality in an 
attempt at building a good PR image for the rest of the world that will 
generate the feeling of trust toward the Kingdom that it openly admits is 
lacking. "Warts and all" reporting is in the long term far more understandable 
and appealing to the rest of the world than the attempt at perpetuating an 
image of perfection that no one believes. An example is the Kingdom's open 
admission to internal terrorism; once the world saw that Saudi Arabia was, far 
from a "vile exporter of state terror" but a victim of extremism - just like 
many other countries, then relations with states once vociferous in their 
criticism of the Kingdom underwent a sea-change for the better.

      Until we can report even more factually and openly, I will keep the toe 
plaster and spare camera handy - just in case.


      * * *

      (As Senior Reporter, Roger Harrison both writes and photographs news and 
local stories and specializes in environmental and water issues.)
     


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