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Chinese Whispers Monday, September 29, 2008 (1278 reads)
By Brenda Heard, Arab Media Watch member and co-founder of Friends of Lebanon.
29 September 2008
Here is the BBC account of what happened in Syria on Saturday 27 September 2008. “Syrian car bomb attack kills 17”. Another car bomb. The Middle East. The reporters worked fast and furious to set the speculation game in motion.
Such acts of violence are deplorable. People at the wrong place at the wrong time are sacrificed to someone else's political ploy. And then they are sacrificed to the media. The dead are counted and the injured are turned into tabloid teasers. Add in a few sound bites from the political pundits, and the media is ready to play Chinese Whispers.
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A murderous theater of the absurd Thursday, September 11, 2008 (1193 reads)
By John Pilger 11 September 2008
Try to laugh, please. The news is now officially parody and a game for all the family to play.
First question: Why are "we" in Afghanistan? Answer: "To try to help in the country's rebuilding program." Who says so? Huw Edwards, the BBC's principal newsreader. What wags the Welsh are.
Second question: Why are "we" in Iraq? Answer: To "plant a western-style open democracy." Who says so? Paul Wood, the former BBC defense correspondent, and his boss Helen Boaden, director of BBC News. To prove her point, Boaden supplied Medialens.org with 2,700 words of quotations from Tony Blair and George W Bush. Irony? No, she meant it.
Take Andrew Martin, divisional adviser at BBC Complaints, who has been researching Bush's speeches for "evidence" of noble democratic reasons for laying to waste an ancient civilization. Says he: "The 'D' word is not there, but the phrase 'united, stable and free' [is] clearly an allusion to it." After all, he says, the invasion of Iraq "was launched as 'Operation Iraqi Freedom'." Moreover,20says the BBC man, "in Bush's 1 May 2003 speech (the one on the aircraft carrier) he talked repeatedly about freedom and explicitly about the Iraqi transition to democracy ... These examples show that these were on Bush's mind before, during and after the invasion."
Try to laugh, please.
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Acts of War: The stories behind the invasion of Iraq Monday, March 10, 2008 (1481 reads)
By Ian Burrell 10 March 2008 The Independent
Given the pain suffered by the BBC over its previous attempts to decipher the events that led to the invasion of Iraq, some might be surprised by its plans to produce a series of dramatic reconstructions of some of the critical stories in the days prior to the war.
Yet Newsnight viewers remain so fascinated and exercised by this period that the writer Ronan Bennett was hired to make 10 Days to War, a series of eight short films that will attempt – through the medium of drama – to enhance understanding of what actually went on.
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BBC Arabic seeks UK-based Arabic-speaking students Friday, March 07, 2008 (2058 reads)
Your role will include:
- Receive calls in the call centre during leading phone-in programmes for radio and TV - Archiving - Perform ad-hoc jobs such as welcoming and receiving guests in reception and guiding them to studios
Requirements:
- Arabic as a mother tongue or equivalent - Good verbal communication skills in Arabic and English - Ability to speak and understand major Arabic dialects - Comfortable using computers - Valid UK work permit
Duration:
- 3 hours a day, 3 days a week for an ongoing basis
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