According to the United Nations, one child has been killed in Gaza
every hour for the past two days. Overall, the Israeli military has
killed more than 700 Palestinians, the vast majority civilians, since
the assault on Gaza began more than two weeks ago. Details of the
slaughter make their way into the world’s media, with horrific accounts
of children killed on the beach, of hospital intensive-care units
bombed, of first responders, searching for wounded amid the rubble,
killed by Israeli sniper fire. Armed resistance groups in Gaza, most
notably that of the area’s elected government, Hamas, have fired
thousands of crude rockets that have killed two in Israel. Since Israel
began its land invasion of Gaza, more than 30 Israeli soldiers have been
killed. One of the greatest challenges in understanding the situation
in Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories is getting reliable
information. This latest assault on Gaza reaffirms the key role played
by the U.S. media in maintaining the information blockade. It also
highlights the increasing importance of pressure applied by social
networks.
One headline said it all: “Missile at Beachside Gaza Cafe Finds
Patrons Poised for World Cup.” That was The New York Times, referring to
a missile strike in Gaza that killed at least eight people on the beach
in the town of Khan Younis. Ali Abunimah, a prominent
Palestinian-American journalist who co-founded the website The
Electronic Intifada, mockingly tweeted: “Israeli missile stops by Gaza
cafe for a drink and dialogue with its Palestinian friends.” The odd,
passive phrasing of the original headline became the subject of a global
social-media firestorm. The New York Times replaced the headline with
“In Rubble of Gaza Seaside Cafe, Hunt for Victims Who Had Come for
Soccer.”
This wasn’t the first time in this latest attack on Gaza that a major news organization got a black eye.
This is an excerpt from the column posted at Truthdig. Click here to read the full column.
http://www.democracynow.org/blog/2014/7/24/overcoming_the_media_blockade_in_gaza
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