|
Story:
Focus Shifts to Rebuilding Iraq, 4/17/03
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/extra/features/jan-june03/jordan_4-17.html
Related
Lesson Plan
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/extra/teachers/lessonplans/iraq/jordan_4-17.html
Chief
News Executive Eason Jordan's admission that CNN withheld information
about torture in the Iraqi regime opens a heated journalism ethics debate.
Cable News Network
chief news executive Eason Jordan's recent admission that he withheld
information about how Iraqi officials intimidated and tortured Iraqis
who had helped CNN over the past decade has opened up a heated debate
about journalism ethics.
Jordan wrote about the situation in an op-ed. In the article, Jordan
said that he traveled to the Iraqi capital 13 times to talk government
officials into keeping the CNN bureau there open and to arrange interviews
with Iraqi leaders.
CNN withheld information about torture in Iraq
regime
"Each time I visited, I became more distressed by what I saw and
heard - awful things that could not be reported because doing so would
have jeopardized the lives of Iraqis, particularly those on our Baghdad
staff," he wrote.
In one example, CNN's Iraqi cameraman was abducted, beaten and subjected
to electroshock torture in the basement of a secret police headquarters
because he refused answer what Jordan called "ludicrous" questions.
The CNN executive said that if his network reported on the cameraman's
torture, Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein's henchmen would have killed the
man and may have gone after his family and co-workers.
Jordan also wrote that Saddam's oldest son, Uday Hussein, told him in
1995 that he intended to assassinate King Hussein of Jordan and two brothers-in-law
who had defected to Jordan. The CNN chief told the king, who dismissed
the threat, but the two brothers-in-law returned to Iraq and were later
assassinated.
The right decision?
Jordan's admissions drew criticism from commentators,
both liberal and conservative.
On CNN's rival, the more conservative Fox News Channel, columnist Charles
Krauthammer said, "It's a classic example of selling your soul for
the story. He clearly gave up truth for access."
Franklin Foer, associate editor of the more liberal New Republic magazine,
said he was suspicious of Jordan's "outbreak of honesty" and
suggested he should apologize for CNN's cooperation with Iraq's Information
Ministry and admit "that CNN policy hinders truthful coverage of
dictatorships."
Responding to critics, Jordan sent a memo to his staff defending his actions:
"CNN kept pushing for access in Iraq, while never compromising its
journalistic standards in doing so," he wrote. "Withholding
information that would get innocent people killed was the right thing
to do, not a journalistic sin."
Sympathy for CNN's dilemma
Some news directors are sympathetic to Jordan's dilemma. "If we thought
that we were endangering somebody we had hired to help us to report, that
would be something that we would weigh very heavily," Michele Grant,
the British Broadcasting Company's director of development in the United
States, said.
Alex S. Jones, director of Harvard University's Shorenstein Center on
the Press, Politics and Public Policy, said Jordan was not the only news
chief to make such difficult decisions. "I think every news organization
has to make those kinds of calls from time to time," he said.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Vocabulary:
op-ed
- (n.) short for opposite editorial, a page of special features usually
opposite the editorial page of a newspaper and containing personal opinions
and essays
dictatorship
- (n.) autocratic rule, control, or leadership; a form of government in
which absolute
|