Media blackout:
Are Kurdish lives somehow less
valuable than Palestinian and Iraqi ones?
August 25, 2005
MICHAEL PETROU
www.macleans.ca
Here's a story about an uprising
in the Middle East you probably haven't heard of. For
more than a month, riots and violent protests have swept through
the Kurdish areas of northern Iran, resulting in a government crackdown
that has killed up to 20 people and injured hundreds more.
The unrest began on July 9, when Kurdish activist Shwane
Ghaderi was killed by Iranian security forces in Mahabad. He was allegedly shot, dragged through the streets
and tortured to death. Demonstrations against Iran's theocratic dictatorship erupted
immediately and spread across the region.
At least 10 Kurdish demonstrators were reportedly killed when
the government deployed helicopter gunships
against protesters who had attacked a military outpost with
rocks and sticks and ransacked government offices in the city
of Saqqez. Residents of most Kurdish cities
in the region called a general strike in a show of solidarity.
Shops closed and streets were empty. All this information
comes from Iranian exiles and members of dissident groups,
who are in contact with Iranian Kurds on the ground and who
have passed on their reports, digital photos and lists of
the dead. Iran's state news agency acknowledges the
turmoil, but says that the unrest is the result of "anarchists"
and "hooligans."
I am almost certain that everything I have related here is
true. It comes from a variety of reliable sources and from
people who have family in the area. But I can't compare these
reports to those from traditional Western media outlets for
the strange reason that, as near as I can tell, no Western
reporter has visited the area.
I partially understand why this is the case.
Iran, like most dictatorships, assigns a government
"minder" to shadow foreign correspondents in the
country and to control whom the journalist talks to. Most
correspondents don't like to mention this in their dispatches.
It ruins their allure as rugged and independent truth-seekers.
Journalists who rub a dictatorial government the wrong way
may find their visas revoked and their employer's bureau shut
down. In the end, it's easiest just to do what you're told.
And if you're told not to cover the deadly violence in Kurdistan, well, maybe there's a press conference
about Iran's nuclear energy program you can report
on instead.
I think this explains in part the media blackout about what's
happening in Iranian Kurdistan, but it doesn't explain everything.
The bigger problem is an uglier one. Some causes, and some
people, are fashionable to Western journalists and to the
public at large, and some are not. Imagine for a moment that
20 unarmed Palestinians had been killed by Israeli soldiers
in the last month, with hundreds more injured and scores arrested.
Is it even conceivable that this would not be front-page news?
Already, photographers working in the Middle East have to work hard to avoid getting
other photographers in their photos of stone-throwing Palestinian
children. The only photos of the unrest in Iran come from local residents.
And what of the so-called "peace"
protesters? Unarmed civilians are being shot down by
government troops in helicopters. Where are Bianca Jagger
and the rest of the celebrity activists? Where are the marching
throngs with their "Free Iran!" and "Free Kurdistan!"
banners? Are Kurdish lives somehow less valuable than Palestinian
and Iraqi ones? Almost all Kurds are also Muslims. Where is
the outrage? Or are the deaths of innocent Muslims only enraging
when they are killed by Americans or Israelis?
Recently, an Iranian friend in London emailed me. "If only this Kurdish
intifada had half the media coverage
as the Palestinian one," he wrote. He's right. What's
happening in Iranian Kurdistan is important. Iran's religious dictatorship is resented
by many, perhaps most, Iranians. But it is particularly abhorrent
to the country's Kurds.
I visited Iranian Kurdistan for a few days last spring, staying
with a family in a small village outside Mahabad.
I had spent the previous two weeks in Iran's major cities. Pro-government vigilantes
had covered walls with spray-painted death threats against
women who didn't wear the hijab.
Religious police decreed that even small plastic mannequins
on display in pharmacy shop windows and revealing the body's
internal organs must have their genitals covered. Undercover
government agents watched me and took my photograph when I
met with student dissidents. And I never knew when my phone
might be tapped.
After all this, Kurdistan felt like a breath of fresh air. Kurdish friends invited me to a wedding,
where men and beautiful, uncovered women danced hand-in-hand
in a riot of music and colour. "We Kurds dance together,"
one man told me. "It causes some problems with the Islamic
people, but I don't care."
That village is now under the heel of thousands of government
troops who have been sent into the region to quell unrest,
and the man from the wedding has no choice but to care what
the Islamic people think. But it is still possible that the
long-simmering anger that is erupting in Iranian Kurdistan
will boil over elsewhere in the country as well. If this happens,
the consequences will be monumental. Pity no one wants to
talk about it now.
See also:
KURDISH GRIEVANCES REMAIN A THORNY ISSUE RFERL
http://www.pdk-iran.org/english/articles/KURDISH%20GRIEVANCES%20REMAIN%20A%20THORNY%20ISSUE.htm
Unrest in Iran's Kurdish Region Has Left 17 Dead; Hundreds
Have Been Wounded NY Times
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/14/international/middleeast/14kurds.html?ex=1124683200&en=cf1a6c75c4be2dcf&ei=5070&emc=eta1
VISIT:
WWW.PDK-IRAN.ORG or WWW.PDKI.ORG
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