Archive | April, 2007

‘Darfur, it’s so difficult to get there!’

Darfur refugees

The session was titled “Darfur, the forgotten crisis” and its scope is

Are the Arab media turning a blind eye to a humanitarian crisis that is unfolding in their own backyard. Many Western journalists along with former U.S. Secretary Powell have characterized Darfur as a genocide. Sudan’s President Bashir accuses Western media and NGOs of greatly exaggerating the crisis. But are the Arab media reporting fully the events in Darfur and holding those responsible for it to account?

Let me first disclose that I arrived at the latter half of the session, so I did miss a lot. However, thinking that the second half of any session is where decisions and positions are reached, it was anything but! The esteemed journalists were complaining of the difficulty of getting visas to enter the Sudan!

The government representative – if he is indeed – was a gentleman who heads the Sudan TV & Radio apparatus, Mr. Ameen Hassan Omar said that all the figures of the dead, destitute and migrants are “rubbish”! All lies! It is not 2 million, it is not even in the thousands!

The NGOs responded that even if it is one life lost, 9 lives, 200,000 lives (as the UN suggests) it is still too much and something needs to be done to eliminate the problem and end the fighting!

That positions was not amplified by the other guests unfortunately, but mulled again on the logistical issues to get to the area to report from.

Ali Al-Ahmed, the director of Abu Dhabi TV – which ceased to be a news channel and is now focusing on general entertainment – interjected rather forcefully that journalists should stop whining and get on with the job; and if they “can’t stand the heat they should get out of the kitchen!”

I met with Ali in the break and asked him his views on the dearth of Darfur coverage, and asked him directly why that is when if we compare it with the Lebanese/Israeli recent war, and even though Lebanon suffered a lot less destruction and lasted a lot shorter, Darfur is completely ignored. He suggested that because of the “internationality” of the Lebanese/Israeli conflict and the Israeli dimension necessitated the “blow-by-blow” coverage. Darfur, he suggests, is a localised problem and is distant from the centre of the Arab psyche.

When the Arab networks were pushed to answer the allegation that they do not and did not cover Darfur effectively and certainly inadequately. Al-Arabiya and Jazeera vehemently denied the allegations and suggested that they have and do give it good importance. I would not be able to judge as I do not watch either channel; but the atmosphere of the venue suggests that they could at least do more.

I must admit that I do not know much about this conflict; the Abu Dhabi TV reporter suggested that the whole conflict started due to a conflict about camels! And that some of the beneficiaries of the continued fighting are some of the Darfurians themselves and gave examples that some Darfurians choose to live in refugee camps and rent their houses and live on international NGOs handouts!

This conflict must be brought to center-stage, as that is a conflict that must be understood and treated globally. Hundreds of thousands of people are dying needlessly and millions are destitute because of – what I understand – government rigidness and prevarication.

Yumm, good breakfast!

Some days are just special… today is one of those days, I can tell.

The alarm clock woke me up at 4.30am. I hit the snooze button a couple of times and eventually dragged myself out of bed and into the shower 10 minutes later.

Before doing that however, and as I do not use the alarm clock that often, I switched on the bedside lamp to shut the bloody thing up for good so as not to wake Frances up too early. Let her enjoy a few more minutes of sleep. That’s when I noticed that the date set on the clock was wrong, it suggested that today is supposed to be the 29th of April. Stupid alarm and stupid person who screwed up the date. I spent a few seconds fixing that mistake and reset it to the proper date. 30 April 2007. Thanks very much.

Croissant for breakfast

Shaved, showered, dressed and downstairs to bid Filbert good morning at about 5.15am. Got the paper on the way to the car and drove off to Muharraq to catch the plane to Abu Dhabi.

The drive was good and unhurried, it was early yet and not too many people on the road still. I arrived at the car parking lot and got the best slot I have ever managed to get in that place! This is going to be a really good day.

Off to the airport building and the check in computer. Unfortunately it wouldn’t accept my frequent flyer card and nicely told me that it was at fault, apologised profusely and asked me to present myself at a check-in counter, which I did after standing in queue for a short while.

“Good morning sir,” said a laid back almost smiling clerk,
“Good morning!” I replied, joyful even at that early hour, and handed over the ticket printout, my frequent flyer card and my ID.
The guy punched a few buttons and then asked me a rather peculiar question: “did you change your booking recently sir?”
Huh? “Erm, no, why do you ask” as he carried on punching keys,
“Well, it says here that you’re traveling tomorrow, but no worries I found you a seat!”
“WHAT? Whadayameantravelingtomorrow?Ididntchangeanyreservations!”
“Well sir, it says here that you’d be traveling on the 30th?”
“Yeah, so? Today is the 30th!”
(Oh God, a moron in front of me, was the look that drew on his face… smile resumed:)
“Actually sir, it’s the 29th today.”
“Ohmygod. Noway. Isn’t it Monday today?”
“That would be tomorrow sir, today is Sunday”
(muttering and feeling rather stupid) “Oh, in that case, I’ll see you tomorrow morning! Thanks my friend.”
“So shall I cancel today’s travel then?”
“Erm, yeah, thanks, I’ll see you tomorrow”

EXIT, STAGE LEFT!

Damn, how did that happen?

Ah well. Downstairs I go to a café, buy a couple of croissants and latté to go and then drive back to the office… there is nothing like starting a day with a good breakfast, even if you have to drive to another island to get it!

ABF: ‘The Battle for Democracy in the Arab World’

Organiser: Arab Broadcast Forum

Venue: Intercontinental Hotel, Abu Dhabi

Date and Time: The conference will be 29-30 April, the session will be at 3pm on 30 April.

Format: No written contributions or speeches are needed. This is more of a chat with friends and colleagues who are interested in your views. There will be contributions from the audiences and email contributions from the public. Expect your views to be challenged and be ready for lots of fun!

Language: Arabic. Ar-E and E-Ar simultaneous translation will be available for audiences and panelists. The Arabic stream will be taken for tv and radio.

Key questions: It is more than a decade since the launch of the first Arab satellite tv news channels. Have such channels contributed in developing a better understanding of democracy? Should the media promote and advocate democracy or only report the the debate? Who do satellite channels speak for? the majority or the minority? Do they represent the masses or the voices of descent? Do they reflect the range of views in the Arab World? Are they being challenged by the bloggers and does the increasing influence of Arab bloggers mean that the media failed in reflecting the diversity of opinions in the Arab World?

Moderator: Hosam El Sokkari, head, BBC Arabic Network
Featured Speakers: Abdellatif Al-Menawy, head of news, ERTU; Lawrence Pintak, director, Adham Centre for Television Journalism, American University in Cairo, Mahmood Al-Yousif, blogger and activist, Bahrain; Saad Bin Tifla Al-Ajami, academic ex-minister of information in Kuwait; Major Gen. William Caldwell, Spokesperson, Multinational Force in Iraq.

This session will be produced with live audience participation from the audience. It will be broadcast live on BBC Arabic radio and streamed on BBCArabic.com in co-operation with Abu Dhabi Television.

This is going to be very interesting indeed. I’ll blog about it from Abu Dhabi if I get the chance, but expect to hear about it when I get back. This is going to be a day trip (a very long one mind you, I’ll be leaving at approximately 5am and returning just after midnight on the same day – I hope!)