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June 22, 2004
Iraqis to Media: Try Balanced Coverage
Barham Salih, Iraq's Deputy Prime Minister, would like our media to stop the bias in their coverage of the war:
I hope you from the American press will be able to tell people back home … that (through) this mission you are giving an entire nation an opportunity to be rid of their challenges," he said.
"These soldiers are helping renovate schools and so on, and very, very little of that is reported," Salih continued. "We have to be grateful to those young men and women who have come from afar, sacrificing their lives to defend our security and our freedom."
He said context is important, and many American papers don't put things in the proper context. For instance, he said, "Many of the op-ed writers before the war predicted that Kirkuk would become the scene of the most vicious civil war," he said, referring to the northern Iraqi city that has been the site of problems between Kurds and Arabs.
"There are tensions in Kirkuk," he said, "but no civil war."
New Iraqi President Ghazi al-Yawer explained his belief that 90 percent of what's happening in Iraq is good news, and 10 percent in bad. "The media is magnifying the 10 percent, ignoring the 90 percent," Yawer said.
Yawer said he and other Iraqi leaders are working to acquaint the Iraqi people "with the real values of the American Bill of Rights and other great things you have in your constitution."
I expect this will be followed by a 3-part ABC special With Peter Jennings, entitled "The Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister: Why Does He Hate Us So Much?"
June 22, 2004 at 07:50 AM | Permalink
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Comments
The balance to Iraq coverage by our media would of course be the coverage by the foreign media. It's on the internet for anyone who wants it.
Posted by: Two Dishes at Jun 22, 2004 8:27:46 AM

