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Special Report

Interview with prospective suicide bomber raises ethical issues in U.S.

Among journalists in the United States, a traditional view holds that reporters are "objective" observers who do not get involved with the stories they cover. In wars or in politics, for example, this view contends that choosing sides can compromise a reporter's neutrality.

But there are times when reporters find themselves in situations where they may have to choose between their role as a human being, rather than as journalists. Such a case was posed by an interview with a prospective Palestinian suicide bomber reported by Gregg Zoroya in USA Today, the largest circulation national daily newspaper in the United States.

Scott Shuger, a writer for Slate, an on-line publication, was one of the first American journalists to discuss the ethical issues involved. Here is what he wrote:

"Monday's (April 22) USA Today featured a remarkable first - an interview with a Palestinian woman trained by the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades who's planning to carry out a suicide bombing against Israel. The reporter, Gregg Zoroya, met in a West Bank refugee camp with her and her AAMB handler.

"A remarkable story, and an ethically complicated one. Zoroya agreed not to use the woman's real name, a concession USA Today rarely makes. And to ensure that he was not being scammed, he went to Israeli security sources, who confirmed that they counted the handler as active in the AAMB. But he didn't tell the Israelis who the woman was or where his meeting was taking place. From a pure journalism point of view, this all makes perfect sense. But think about this story just a little bit and watch your moral intuition needless start bouncing all over the place.

"Maybe you think it's obvious that USA Today did just what a newspaper should do because journalism is all about reporting the news, not changing it. The paper found out that a woman was planning a suicide attack and reported on her plans, period. But wait a second-recall that to satisfy its own professional requirements, the paper contacted Israeli security sources, thereby notifying them that a particular AAMB member had trained a particular woman to carry out a suicide mission. This is journalism's inevitable Heisenberg effect: Reporting on the world changes it. So, why not change it in a way that could save many innocent lives - by turning her in?

"Suppose USA Today had managed to convince another young angry Muslim to talk on the record about his intention to conduct a suicide mission - and that he'd been trained by al-Qaida to hit an American target. Are you still sure the paper would be right not to go to the (U.S.) government and blow the whistle on this guy? (Bill Sternberg, a Washington-based USA Today senior editor, told me that what the paper would or should do in such a hypothetical situation never came up in the in-house editorial discussions of Zoroya's story; they mostly focused on ensuring the woman's authenticity.)

"If anything gets USA Today off the hook, it's that Zoroya didn't know any details of the woman's plan. She was definite about her intent, but not about anything else. She said why she would attack - because 'Life is worth nothing when our people are being humiliated on a daily basis'-but nothing about what or where or when. If she had gone into these specifics, then surely the paper would have had to drop a dime on her, right? "Journalists should never forget this dilemma posed by terrorism: If knowing something can kill their story, not knowing it can kill us."

(Courtesy: IJ Net)

Sampathnet

Crescat Development Ltd.

www.priu.gov.lk

www.helpheroes.lk


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