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Comment by tsegratis

5 years ago

Investigative journalism, I hope so. But general journalism...

I'm afraid I've traveled enough to say petty wars are often reported night-day level of wrong (at least for all the ones I have experienced)

It seems we want to believe we are good, and 'they' are bad, but frankly we don't care either way, so long as we make money

> Investigative journalism, I hope so.

I work for one (not involved in the actual stories) and I can guarantee that the process I've seen is pretty meticulous.

> But general journalism...

There's a separation that needs to be done here as well between news and columns / opinion pieces. News are supposed to answer what's known as Five Ws (Who, What, When, Where, Why), while columns/opinion pieces are rarely expected to be held to same standards, are often inaccurate, and subjective by their nature (they are opinion pieces after all). Unfortunately they're almost always published under the same brand, but usually when I see people complaining about journalism, they don't make that distinction.

That isn't to say news in itself is not biased, because even picking what's newsworthy is a process that relies on bias.

  • Thanks. I'm sure you're doing clear work, and being precisely truthful about clear topics

    My problem is news like: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-55484436

    BBC saying 'restore the presidents rule' and 'unity cabinet', but this is the same president whose people said was a dictator and overthrew in the Arab spring

    Not following the situation closely, but those five Ws by the BBC look so very strongly in the pocket of arms money and having very little to do with democracy

    To the point I would say they are covered in blood, and calling it 'bringing peace.' I wish this was a lone example

    • I don't read that at all

      The paragraph referring to president:

      "Yemen has been devastated by a conflict that escalated in 2015, when a Saudi-led coalition of Arab states launched a military operation to defeat the Houthis and restore President Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi's rule. "

      > Yemen has been devastated

      Objectively true

      > by a conflict

      There are many reasons but the conflict certainly hasn't helped

      > when a Saudi-led coalition of Arab states launched a military operation

      Is this wrong? There's a wikipedia page on it

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saudi_Arabian-led_intervention...

      > to defeat the Houthis

      "the intervention initially consisted of a bombing campaign on Houthi rebels"

      > and restore President Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi's rule.

      Looks like he has declared President of Yemen in 2012. There are many ruthless rulers who are called "President". "President Putin", "President Mugabe", etc

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/President_of_Yemen

      Was this not the aim of the Saudi led coalition?

      The next paragraph, which is under the "analysis" part

      > Yemen's newly formed "unity cabinet" was always going to have a rocky start. But it clearly did not anticipate this disaster when it announced its arrival would be livestreamed on television.

      Is the new government that has been created known as a unity government? Seems yes, the piece further explains

      "Mr Saeed's new cabinet was formed in an effort to heal a long-running rift between Saudi-backed government forces and militias loyal to the separatist Southern Transitional Council, supported by the United Arab Emirates.

      The two sides are supposed to be allies in the civil war against the Houthi movement, which controls the capital Sanaa and much of north-western Yemen."

      Explaining the name "unity cabinet", it seems to be an effort to unify the non-houti sides.

      You may not think it's a legitimate government, but it seems to be the one recognised by the international community, whether we like it or not. We recognise all sorts of nasty governments, from Venezuala to North Korea, from Russia to Turkey. I don't see any judgement on which side is "good" or "bad" (or "bad" and "worse" as it may be).

      To summarise

      Who -- Houti Rebels

      What -- attacked an airport

      When -- Yesterday

      Where -- Aden Airport

      Why -- because they are fighting against the internationally recognised government

      The BBC has covered the conflict in Yemen a fair amount, here's a story about the background of the rebels.

      https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-31645145

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