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Media Catch Flak Over “Terrorist Training” Story


“Just hours before President Barack Obama took the oath of office, the FBI had word from overseas of a possible terrorist attack,” began a Jan. 28 story on National Public Radio’s “Morning Edition.” “The threat was linked to a Somali hard-line jihadist group called al-Shabab, or The Youth.


“The threat came at a time when the FBI was focused on what looked like a massive recruitment effort of young men from Somali communities in the U.S. As many as two dozen of them have disappeared from Minneapolis alone in the past year.


“Federal agents are worried these young men are training in Somalia and could end up returning to the U.S. to launch a terrorist attack.”


That story ‚Äî and similar ones in the Minneapolis Star-Tribune  (“Recruited for jihad? What happened to Mustafa Ali?”) and Minnesota Public Radio (“The vanishing Somali boys“) ‚Äî prompted a community meeting last week in Minneapolis, painfully re-enacting complaints with the news media that have been voiced over the years across the country.


“There are few relationships on the planet these days worse than the one between the Somali community in the Twin Cities and news organizations which don’t know how to cover it,” Bob Collins reported for Minnesota Public Radio on Thursday. “There’s plenty of fallout following coverage in the last week of rumors/allegations that a Minneapolis mosque had something to do with the disappearance of young Somali men. On Thursday night, the Minnesota News Council sponsored a panel to try to repair the damage that the story, and other coverage of Somalis, has caused.”


“It’s a hole in our organization that we don’t have a lot of Somali people in the newsroom,” said Duchesne Drew of the Star Tribune, explaining his newspaper’s coverage of the story.


Hassan Mohamud of the William Mitchell College of Law said the media “paints the most important institutions ‚Äî which is the mosque ‚Äî in the worst light. Mosques are everything for the Muslim community. . . . They used military language about how we line up. Instead of talking about the positive statements that are made, they talked about my face. . . We cannot trust these people.”


“Without identifying him by name, Mohamud also made clear that Omar Jamal, often quoted by the Twin Cities media as a representative of the Somali community, does not represent the entire community,” the story continued.


“The audience, made up mostly of Somalis, laughed when the Star Tribune’s Drew said Jamal’s name. ‘Omar returns phone calls,’ he said, . . . I hope next time, you guys return phone calls. We’re not not going to run a story because you don’t want to talk. . . . We tried very hard to get as broad a mix of voices as we could.'”


Polk Awards Honor Reporters Who Risked Danger


“Correspondents who risked danger to disclose violence and corruption in Zimbabwe and reporters who unraveled the mysteries of the mortgage crisis and exposed toxic perils in everyday products were among the winners of 14 George Polk Awards for 2008 announced on Monday by Long Island University,” Robert D. McFadden of the New York Times reported on Monday.


Among the winners:




TV Executive Accused of Beheading His Wife


Police say they are “very confident” they have enough evidence to move forward with second degree muder charges against a Buffalo-area man who started a television network to portray Muslims in a better light, and now stands accused of beheading his wife, according to Buffalo station WKBW-TV.


Muzzammil Hassan, 44, is accused of killing 37-year old Aasiya Hassan, who was found slain in the offices of Bridges TV on Friday in suburban Orchard Park shortly after her husband reported her death.


He was arrested hours later.


“The television channel, which Hassan had founded after leaving a job at M&T Bank, had been under financial strain, said Khalid J. Qazi, president of the Muslim Public Affairs Council of Western New York,” Fred O. Williams and Gene Warner reported in the Buffalo News.


Aasiya Hassan had filed for divorce and obtained an order of protection on Feb. 6, barring her husband from their home, police said, according to the News.


It would be a mistake to link an act of domestic violence to the couple’s religion, Khalid J. Qazi, president of the Muslim Public Affairs Council of Western New York, told the News.


Asked if the slaying is being investigated as an honor killing, Orchard Park Police Chief Andrew Benz replied, “It’s safe to say we’re investigating all the angles we can, all the possibilities in conjunction with the district attorney’s office. We’re looking at whatever we might come across,” Fox News Channel reported.


Muzzammil Hassan arrived in the United States from Pakistan in 1979, news reports said.


Black Press Backed on “Window Dressing” Complaint


The Washington Times on Sunday backed members of the black press who complained that they were “window dressing” at President Obama’s news conference last week, as they were seated prominently but were not called upon.


“What purpose does it serve to put black journalists from black-owned media organizations in the front row where they can be seen, if they are not on the list Mr. Obama used when calling upon questioners?” an editorial said. “Mr. Obama’s list ‚Äî that’s what no one has mentioned. President George W. Bush was skewered for having ‘scripted’ press conferences but Mr. Obama got a pass, as usual.


“Mr. Obama should either shelve the Potemkin village approach or, if he wants to maintain civility, let everyone run to a microphone who wants to ask a question and take the questions in order. Apparently that is the only way reporters from black media organizations have any shot at asking the president questions on camera.”



Presidents, Black History Observances Get Complicated


As the 44th president, Barack Obama “has necessarily fallen in with a checkered crowd,” William Jelani Cobb wrote in a Presidents Day piece for theRoot.com:


Washington, who laid out precise numbers of slaves to keep a perfect gender ratio of the Negroes he owned; Jefferson, who crossed out the lines in the Declaration of Independence that condemned the slave trade, copy editing black freedom out of existence. Jackson, who strangled abolitionist efforts and bought a black girl at an auction for his own entertainment; Lyndon B. Johnson, who signed civil rights laws but never relinquished his profane noun of choice for black people. Even Barack’s boy, Abraham Lincoln, was arm-twisted into glory and penned the Emancipation Proclamation as he struggled to exile freed blacks outside America’s borders. It’s this kind of thing that will make your head grow weary of pondering.


“On the day after the election, one of my students announced to me that the question was no longer ‘What to the slave is the 4th of July’ but ‘What to the African American is the 4th of November.’ I didn’t have an answer for her then ‚Äî and I still don’t. But when I figure that one out, I can holler back about the meaning of Presidents Day.”



  


Some Metaphors You Can Just Put a Cap On


An editorial cartoon by David Cohen, a regular freelancer for the Asheville (N.C.) Citizen-Times, never made it into the newspaper, but it’s caused him grief all the same.


“Most of my cartoons deal with word play,” Cohen explained to Journal-isms on Monday, describing why he chose the images for his Feb. 9 drawing. He posted his work on the Web site of the Association of American Editorial Cartoonists, of which he is a member, and on that site, cartoons go through no editor.


The cartoon, headlined, “Post-Racial America,” shows a black man holding a gun to a white man in its first panel, saying, “I’m puttin’ a cap in your a–!” In the second panel, President Obama is pointing a finger at the same white man, presumably a corporate executive, saying, “I’m putting a cap on your salary!”


Cohen, 54, was drawn to the word play possibilities of the phrase “put a cap on.”


“I liked the phrase and I’ve heard it used myself, in rap music, and Chris Rock used it on cable TV. When I first heard the words ‘putting a cap on’ something, my main concern was not spelling out the word ‘ass’.”


His point? “The ‘post-racial’ angle is that he is in charge,” Cohen explained, speaking of Obama. “I voted for him. I’m behind him 100 percent.”


The cartoon ended up on the local Web site Ashvegas as well as on other cartoonists’ blogs.


“David is a good guy, doesn’t have a racist bone in his body,” said Jim Buchanan, Citizen-Times editorial page editor. He asked Cohen to remove any identification with the newspaper, however, wherever that particular cartoon appeared.


The problem, Cohen said he realized, was that he wasn’t clear enough in the message he was trying to convey.


“Giving him the benefit of the doubt here,” black comic artist Darrin Bell wrote on one cartoonists’ blog, “the moral of the story is simple: If when you’re trying to justify your work you’re more likely to cite Chris Rock, slang and rap than you are Richard Wright, Octavia Butler, and W.E.B. DuBois, you might want to be extra scrupulous with your racial metaphors.”


Payne Says He Was Wrong About Sports Journalism


“I come forth humbly now, as Alex Rodriguez did last week, to declare that where once I was blind ‚Äî I now see the light,” longtime editor and columnist Les Payne, formerly of Newsday, wrote Saturday on his blog.


“In my case, it was about sports reporting. Years ago, as an aggressive newspaper editor, I diverted several young sportswriters into political reporting on the advice that they should put away childish things.


“. . . I felt a lot of pressure back then to increase the ranks of what, deep down, was construed as ‘serious’ journalism. Like A-Rod, I was young. I was stupid. I wanted to enhance socio-political coverage exclusively; and for this narrow-mindedness, I am deeply regretful.


“. . . as much as any sports writer, the work of Bill Rhoden continues to leaven my view of journalism. . . . the Times’ columnist is sustaining a current hot streak in unraveling the complexities of the steroids matter that plagues the major leagues. Along the way, he brings into sharp relief the broader societal issues of truth, fairness and the possibility of reconciliation. ‘Our dual national pastimes ‚Äî Wall Street and Major League Baseball,’ Bill argues, ‘have been slammed into the rocks by ambition and unchecked greed.'”


Rhoden wrote Thursday of the A-Rod steroids scandal, “The only way to close this chapter is for Major League Baseball to go through a deep and intensive soul-searching. It needs to hold its own scaled-down version of South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation hearings after apartheid was abolished in the early 1990s.”



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