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Why
are Western journalists anti-Lanka?
The
season for bashing the foreign media has commenced
judging from commentaries that had appeared on the Sri
Lankan scene in recent weeks. This writer too has been a
foreign media basher for long years and I do feel that
some of the fury unleashed is justifiable but it is also
time to reflect on the futility of the exercise.
Two
weeks ago on the World News of the BBC, an anchorman was
interviewing his reporter on the displaced persons (IDPs)
who had been housed in the newly set up camps around
Vavuniya. The question of the anchorman was something
like this ( I can't recall the exact words): So these
people who have escaped from the cross-fire are now
being put into 'Concentration Camps?' The reporter
himself appeared to be taken aback at the terminology
used. 'Concentration camp' is too strong a description,
he replied, before he went on to tamely answer other
questions.
Concentration Camps?
Conditions in camps in Vavuniya would not have been
ideal to meet the standards of the BBC anchorman but
this comparison with 'concentration camps' in the World
News programme - of the oldest international news
service which many still regard as 'independent' - was
unpardonable.
Were
the camps hastily set up in Vavuniya being compared with
the Belen or Treblinka Camps of Nazi Germany or even Abu
Gharaib or Guantanamo Bay which the British are still
actively associated with? Not even a novice reporter
could have made such a gaffe.
A few
days later another horrendous gaffe was made on the news
broadcast of al Jazeera, the 'independent' TV channel,
which is said to be favourable to the Third World. The
anchorman was on the same issue of displaced persons in
camps in Vavuniya. These displaced persons are now being
kept in places surrounded by 'razor wire'? he asked. By
'razor wire' in my opinion what was implied was 'barbed
wire,' a term commonly used by Sri Lankans.
Did
not these pundit and their backroom advisers not know of
the Sri Lankan IDPs plight that made world headlines for
weeks? A suicide bomber on one occasion had come in with
the IDPs and blown herself up killing many service
personnel and IDPs. A bus carrying IDPs had been shot
at. Didn't they consider that some sort of security was
required? In other countries is security imposed at such
refugee camps as lax as that at boy scout jamborees?
The
horror created by al Jazeera was perhaps more
devastating than the BBC. Here was a TV channel that
most
Third World viewers consider to be different to Western
channels. There appears to be no difference between this
TV channel whose key journalists are like those of other
Western channels except perhaps they are paid better
with petrodollars. The difference could only be
witnessed when Arab interests are focused on.
Why
the hostility
Why is
this seeming hostility of the Western journalists - not
all - towards Sri Lanka, particularly Sri Lankan
governments?
In my
opinion it goes back to a quarter century when India was
under 'Empress Indira Gandhi' as The Economist at that
time described her. India's relations with the West was
quite different to the cosy relations of today. Indira
Gandhi was with the other superpower, the
Soviet Union and she saw the West as a force destabilising
India
- the foreign hand.
Western media covering South Asia was stationed in
New Delhi
and Indira was viewing them with a jaundiced eye.
However, the Sri Lankan situation gave an opportunity
for the Indian bureaucracy and intelligence (RAW) to use
the Western media in New Delhi's interest.
What
happened in
New Delhi
can only be surmised but in Colombo we saw Indian
officials particularly those identified as being RAW -
Research and Analysis Wing - having close relations with
the newly arrived international correspondents in
Colombo. Some of these Western correspondents were
themselves quite raw to the profession having been sent
out after a brief stint in provincial newspapers.
These
young journalists were cultivated quite openly by Indian
agents who helped them very greatly in their
professional assignments. An information/intelligence
network sprang up in the north and east through which
any incident in the north and east was flashed to
Colombo
within minutes. All what the international hot shots
living comfortably in Colombo's hotels such as the then
Ramada Hotel or Galle Face Hotel had to do was to
transmit the messages immediately to their headquarters
in world capitals to be disseminated around the globe.
Some
of these reports that went against the Sri Lankan
government forces were true, particularly when raw Sri
Lankan recruits ran amuck against civilians but on the
whole news packaged by RAW was against the Sri Lankan
government leading to charges of genocide against the
Tamils.
Genocide charge
Against this backdrop were the attempts made at Geneva
to raise resolutions of genocide against
Sri Lanka
actively backed by India and also new found friends in
the West -
America
and European nations. Signs were beginning to show of
the emergence of a burgeoning Indian middle class with
market potential of about 350 million and even Ronald
Reagan during the tail end of his administration could
not resist.
A
fallout of this
New Delhi
endeavour is the tainting of Sri Lanka for a quarter
century - the rights of the minorities were being
deliberately suppressed while the atrocities of
terrorists were treated with indulgence. There is much
more to this theory of an New Delhi conspiracy where
newly created think tanks disseminated the journalistic
shorthand to explain it all - 'Sinhala majority
through centuries have been suppressing the Tamil
minority and this is all ordained in a historical text
the Mahavamsa where the Sinhala Buddhists are the
'chosen race' to protect Buddhism in this island.
It
took a senior American journalist Barbra Crossette,
Bureau Chief of The New York Times to say that this
'journalist shorthand' was too simplistic an explanation
to a rather complex problem.
Sri Lanka
vs. The World
Nonetheless the problem exists and however much our Sri
Lankan defenders lambaste the international media it
will be of no effect. Some of the criticism is justified
but on the whole the reportage has been biased. What
critics could do is not to continue with their spite and
venom but try to remedy the situation. A handful of Sri
Lankan critics cannot take on the powerful Western
media.
To
accuse Western journalists of being bribed by terrorists
is to throw fuel into the fire. Those who know
journalists realise very well that the best way to
'bribe' them is not with material gains but to provide
them with exclusive stories. A few experienced advisors
in the state media outfit know this very well but they
would be stepping out of line and risk being called
'traitors.'
Its
time to check the hubris of stout defenders of the
Rajapakse faith and instead begin thinking afresh of
making friends and influencing people.
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