In Wake Of Paris
Attacks, Western Media As The Arbiter
Saeed Naqvi
The massacre in Paris is not just a French or a western
tragedy. It has caused universal outrage. And yet the global media’s coverage
of the horror tends to give the West a monopoly on pain.
Why, hours before the Paris attack, nearly 50 Shia Muslims were
slaughtered by the IS and over 200 injured in Beirut; 27 members of a Shia
leader’s funeral were butchered in Baghdad which has lost count of such
occurrences. And all of this on the heels of a Russian passenger aircraft
brought down over Sinai, killing all 224 passengers, and the October massacre
in Ankara, killing 102 and so on and so forth including the 141 school children
slaughtered in Peshawar at the hands of terrorists now wearing the IS garb.
Could all those smart anchors on the streets of Paris not
have reflected on the pain outside their immediate surroundings? This is the
parochialism of the contemporary media, focused only on “us” and “our kind”.
The larger humanity has to be left as the business of bards and bohemian poets
with a leftist streak.
In the imperial global hierarchy, the media covering such
events and the one which is beamed worldwide happens to be in exclusive control
of Washington and London. This media’s perspectives are prioritized by western
interests.
Whatever the explanation, the coverage of an event like
Paris divides the world into two sets of audiences.
Folks in the West, their anxieties heightened by the
outrage, find comfort in the International community getting into a scrum on
the issue in Vienna, Antalya…wherever. They find the coverage in tune with
their fears and concerns.
This powerful community is not even aware of the popular
Cairo blog which asks the question:
“The International Community keeps asking what the region is
doing to stop the spread of the ISIS; the region keeps asking why ISIS is only
a problem when it strikes Western targets.” Millions in the Arab World ask such
questions.
Social media in the region lampoons the West’s reactions. A
cartoon shows two patients in a hospital. One covered head to toe in bandages
is named “Syria”. The other, in the adjacent bed, with a bandaged finger is
called “Paris”. A man in a three piece suit, labeled the “International
community”, leans over to kiss the bandaged finger.
Since there is in the Arab world (as in India) no media capable
of live coverage of events like the attack in Paris, there is among these populations
an acute sense of helplessness. Each family is riveted on its TV set which
blares Muslim terror at them but never dwells on Muslim pain. Iraq, Libya,
Syria, three efficient dictatorships have all been destroyed. Nearly three
million have been killed by western bombardment, the IS, consequent civil wars.
Hundreds of thousands are on the march towards a Europe torn between
hospitality and its exact opposite.
These are the images which preoccupy their brutalized lives.
Self centered coverage by the Western media come across to them as frames from
which their continuing tragedies are missing.
At the cost of being repetitive let me explain that I am
sensitive to these disparities because I was present at the inauguration of the
global media when in February 1991 CNN brought the first ever war live into our
drawing rooms. This was the Operation Desert Storm. The coverage resonated with
western audiences as triumphalism doubly exhilarating because it came so soon
after the collapse of the Soviet Union. Equally, it added to the Arab world’s
sense of defeat and humiliation. It almost ignited global terrorism in this
era. The dazzling fireworks on live TV over Afghanistan a decade later added
fuel to this fire.
What irks Arab intelligentsia most is a sense of impotence
at two levels – one at the level of their own authoritarian regimes which are
often in cahoots with the west, and secondly with the West itself which is
impervious to popular Arab discontent. The West only deals with potentates or
rebel groups in Syria, Libya, Iraq.
It is an article of faith in the Arab world that the ISIS
is, in its origins, a US, Saudi Turkish, Israeli creation. Off the record, Arab
Ambassadors in New Delhi will testify to this widespread belief in their
respective countries. In an interview with Thomas Friedman of the New York
Times in August last year, President Obama himself admitted that the ISIS had
been of use in certain circumstances. “We did not start air strikes all across
Iraq as soon as the ISIS came in because that would have taken the pressure off
Nouri al-Maliki”, the then Shia Prime Minister of Iraq out of favour with the
US.
In other words, not long ago, the priority was to get rid of
Maliki rather than halt the ISIS. An altered world order may well be the price
for that delay.
After the Paris attack, the media has boosted the anti terror
mood to the sort of pitch reminiscent of the first Gulf war. This time even
Russia is part of the pack.
Incidentally, the media forgot to mention the first effect
of the Paris attack – cancellation of Iranian President Hassan Rouhani’s visit
to France, Italy and the Vatican, an outcome that must have pleased Riyadh.
Western resolve to fight terror will be on test in Africa where
the entire belt from Nigeria right upto Somalia is in the line of fire of IS look-alikes
like Boko Haram and Al Shabab. French intelligence, which allowed President Francois
Hollande to watch a soccer match in a stadium which was attacked by suicide bombers,
is once again embarrassed by gunmen holding a number of hostages in Bamako, capital
of Mali, which was presumed to have been tranquilized by French troops only last
year.
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