Thursday, May 12, 2022

IF THE DEATH OF A JOURNALIST CANNOT BE BLAMED ON ISRAEL, NOBODY GIVES A SHIT

Does Anyone Actually Care About Shireen Abu Akleh?

Or does the overblown response to her death have more to do with Israel?

 


Israel Today

 

 

Palestinians get noisy over the death of Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh. But would they even care if her deal couldn't be blamed on Israel? Palestinians get noisy over the death of Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh. But would they even care if her deal couldn't be blamed on Israel?

 

The death of Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh is sad, tragic even, regardless of which side fired the bullet that killed her in Jenin. But the response to her death in comparison the responses to the deaths of many other journalists in this region is so exaggerated as to be comical.

It seems to be all anyone can talk about. From the White House to the United Nations to Al Jazeera’s headquarters in Qatar, defeating and incessant calls for investigation, even as everyone seems to have already extrajudicially determined Israel’s guilt.

Why did we not hear such calls or see such an overwhelming reaction on social media following the deaths of the journalists listed below, or the hundreds of others who met similar fates?

To provide a comprehensive list would require a full encyclopedia. Hundreds of journalists have died covering the Middle East in just the past two decades, and hundreds more have been jailed. So why haven’t we heard their names being shouted more widely, or of this clearly pandemic-level problem in general?

Only one conclusion can be reached: None of those journalists died in such a way that Israel could be blamed.

Their deaths were no less tragic or less detrimental to the cause of a free press than that of Abu Akleh. And yet far fewer seemed to care.

So which is the genuine response? The relatively muted acknowledgement of the deaths of the journalists listed above? Or the vociferous outpouring of blame and condemnation over Abu Akleh?

Very few people actually care about the death of a single journalist, or apparently even of hundreds. And it’s doubtful that very many are truly mourning the demise of Abu Akleh and what it means for freedom of the press. That certainly must be the case among the Palestinians and other Arab states, where “freedom of the press” is about as existent as “democracy,” which is to say it isn’t.

More to the point, if conclusive evidence were to emerge that Abu Akleh was killed by a Palestinian bullet, most of those now bemoaning her death would quickly move on to a different topic.

The only thing genuine about their present response is the hatred for Israel. For if Israel weren’t involved, hers would have been quietly added to the list above, and the rest of the world would’ve never heard the name Shireen Abu Akleh.

ADDENDUM FROM THE NEW YORK POST:

 

Karine Jean-Pierre.“We call for a thorough investigation to determine the circumstances of her death,” incoming White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said aboard Air Force One 

     

Incoming White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Wednesday that the US government condemns the killing of Al Jazeera reporter Shireen Abu Akleh, a US citizen who was fatally shot while covering an Israeli raid in the West Bank.

Abu Akleh was wearing a blue bulletproof vest that said “PRESS” when she was hit by gunfire in the town of Jenin, south of Nazareth. An injured colleague claimed Israeli troops shot her in the face.

“We call for a thorough investigation to determine the circumstances of herdeath,”  Jean-Pierre told reporters aboard Air Force One while en route to Chicago.

1 comment:

Trey said...

Sounds familiar. If the death of a black man can't be blamed on a cop, nobody gives a shit.