Tuesday 8 February 2011

Must truth be the first casualty in war?


Words: 3,276
 Introduction
Truth for the majority of mankind is a fact which has been verified or as per the Concise Dictionary of English “a concept or system of concepts, regarded as accurately representing some aspects of the world, the universe”. Journalists and reporters very often don’t check their sources properly as Nick Davies writes page after page in Flat Earth News. The maxim “In war, truth is the first casualty” does not come from Senator Hiram Johnson (it doesn’t appear in any of his speeches) as Arthur Ponsonby states in his Falsehood in Wartime: Propaganda Lies of the First World War (1928). The quote is attributed (but not sourced!) to the fifth century BC Greek dramatist, Aeschylus, author of Armageddon. As that play shows us, truth is at the centre of any human conflict.
For different purposes in times of war and conflict, truth is hidden, distorted and very few times spoken. How (the hell?) can media represent the truth in times of conflict and war? Is/was Max Hastings right when claiming that reporting was an “extension part of the war effort”? We will look at the challenges facing the media and specifically war/conflict reporters and journalists : factors influencing objectivity, the context and the object of reporting.
To give a framework, we will look at times of pre and post conflicts and the live reporting during such hostilities. We will look at a few examples in the total wars (Word War I), localised conflicts like the Gulf War I (20 years ago – without celebrations from today’s press), one-on-one wars such as the Falklands/Malvinas conflict and internal wars. Avoiding the “war on terror” which is not one – as terrorism in its essence is based on elusiveness and hence such acts are not stricto sensu a war but a feud, we will reflect on how journalists can be tricked into ignoring the truth or facts and the reasons for such “attitudes”. We will ask the question if lessons can be learned (finally) on war and conflict reporting and how neutrality and impartiality need to be part of the media in an increasingly internet-based and warfare world.

PART I: Pre-conflicts and Propaganda
During Aeschylus’ time, battles and conflicts were reported by the military apparatus and over history by writers, citizens, spies, diplomats, the religious, journalists, reporters, and nowadays internet users. Very often, the reporting of conflicts is a very challenged matter for the would–be neutral and impartial observer.
As in the case of many human oppositions, there is always a three-period phase in a war: pre-conflict, hostilities and post-hostilities. Such a structure will allow us to analyse some tangent trends in the propaganda of different parties in hostilities during such times and the difficulties of reporting. But what is the role of the media during such periods? Are the reporters and their team representing the military view, the politicians from the home side or the victims of such conflicts? The analysis of some elements in the different parties propaganda prior to a state of war reveals some interesting findings.
In the pre-war or conflict times, Susan Carruthers in her book, The Media at War (2000), exposes the intrinsically antithetic paradox of the media: either following the war machine apparatus propaganda and presenting a nationalistic view to the readers or viewers or being independent, neutral, impartial and investigative at the risk of being labelled a traitor and losing contacts. For the governments across the world, the media is the support to tell the Nation of the necessity of war, the narrowing of, and the possibility of starting hostilities imminently. Tony Blair’s statement to the British Parliament of the 45-minute strike of Britain by Iraq weapons of mass destruction[1] and the following media frenzy, reflects such a stance. At that time, the BBC instead of accepting such a fact as the truth sent Andrew Gilligan to enquiry about such a claim.
This is how media should react to all sorts of pre-war propaganda whatever the “boomerang effect” (the controversial Hutton Report in this case). Such an example of falsehood relating to non-existent facts and WMD shows the extend of prefabricated stories prior to a conflict.
In the Frontline, In Search Of Truth In Wartime film documentary, John Pilger interviews a former CIA Intelligence Officer, Ralph McGehee, describing the incessant campaigns of disinformation targeting the press with white (or governmental statements), grey, and black propaganda (where you speak in the voice of your enemy). According to McGehee, in early 1965 in order to find a reason to get involved in the Vietnam conflict, the CIA sent 80 tons of weapons in a jonque to fake an invasion from North Vietnam to produce evidence to the US International Press Commission and the American public. Pictures and footage were sent to the TV networks showing the “evidence” that North Vietnam planned to invade the South imminently. Soon after that, a first battalion of US Marines started operation in the former French colony, and a week later, the US government launched operation Rolling Thunder, the start of the US-Vietnam War.
As it is not human nature to kill freely, in order to overcome such feelings, the production of the “necessity of illusions, fantasies and myths” is needed to overcome this natural human disinclination. As Adam Curtis analyses in The Power of Nightmares: “The way you do it is with propaganda”. In that framework, news is regarded by the army forces as a commodity to be manipulated, distorted or hidden for the final objective, victory. Either “noble lies” for Plato, “a big lie” for Hitler, a deception, untruth, or lie is needed to launch any war. This is a reason why semantically the first victim of war is the truth.
These different kinds of propaganda (white, grey and black) should always be kept in mind by the credible media, at any level, in order to keep the focus on objectivity. As time and conflicts show, this is rarely the case.

2 Media and Propaganda’s apparatus
The most efficient PR apparatus was developed by Joseph Goebbels, Hitler’s propaganda minister who infamously wrote: “News policy is a weapon of war” in his personal diary. According to Susan Carruthers, Goebbels took the British propaganda strategy of the First World War and applied it to the Nazi regime. Before WW1, the press in France and the UK was forced to publish material which, it was later found, had no foundation and were actually falsehoods.
From the British PM’s 45-minute claim to NATO statement that 100.000 Kosovo people died at the hands of the Serbian army – Milosovic was indicted for 498 killings by the International Court of Justice, slightly lower than the “collateral damages” (510 dead) suffered by civilians in the ex-Yugoslavia by NATO bombing– the times of pre-conflict are full of such stories which the press in its entirety report without double checking the facts. Obviously, the difficulty is “access” but more often the same old stories resurfaced.
The “Bayonet Baby Effect” atrocity is possibly the best paradigm of the disinformation campaigns or the manufacture of news. Always repeated, and always believed by reporters and journalists.



The Bayonet Baby Effect
At the beginning of the WW1 (1914), the British press were reporting that Germans were tossing Belgian babies into the air and catching them with their bayonets like the Norman Lindsay described in his picture, The Bulletin (see Pictography reference).
Arthur Ponsonby (op cit.) reveals that same story and a similar one of babies having their hands cut off by Germans shortly after invading Belgium: “On September 2, 1914, The Times correspondent quotes French refugees declaring: "They cut the hands off the little boys so that there shall be no more soldiers for France."
However, Francesco Nitti, Italian Prime Minister during WW 1, stated in his memoirs: “We heard the story of poor little Belgian children whose hands were cut off by the Huns. (...) Mr. Lloyd George [then British PM] and myself carried out on extensive investigations as to the truth of these horrible accusations, some of which, at least, were told specifically as to names and places. Every case investigated proved to be a myth."
Philip Knightley in his monumental book, The First Casualty (p.486), describes the alleged atrocities when the Iraqi troops arrived in Kuwait City and tossed babies out of incubators to send those machines back to their country. A campaign was orchestrated by the Citizens of Free Kuwait with stories appearing in the Daily Telegraph, Reuters, L.A Times, and others, with the nexus being a young Kuwaiti woman in front of a US Congressional Causus on Human Rights describing how she lost her baby with the robbery of the incubators. Some sources said that due to the outrage of the American public, George Bush Sr. did a U-turn and started speaking more belligerently speech about the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait. The young woman, Nayirah, was the daughter of the Kuwaiti Ambassador in the US and such a story, as it later emerged, was just part of the Kuwaiti in exile Government propaganda.
Such stories and similar ones (eg. the “rape camps” in Kosovo or the “death camps” in Bosnia[2]) constantly appear in the press before small or major conflicts. It is very often referred to the hitlerisation or demonisation of the enemy, the “other” (see. Stuart Allan in News Culture under “Us and Them : racism in the news” p.157 for further development on this specific issue).
The role of each serious newspaper and channel is to check the veracity of such facts one way or another, whatever the atrocities. Failure to do so ends with the media’s worst enemy, loss of credibility.
Finally, such “psychological” imagery was used during the 1989 Romanian revolution and is still visible nowadays in the “Killing Fields” of Cambodia on large billboards showing a super-human Khmer Rouge soldier (on his own and at the same time) tossing and bayonetting a baby.
Conflicts in South East Asia have changed media conflict reporting and military propaganda. As we will see, freedom of reporting during war itself can bring disparate and complex situations on both sides.

Part II - War and conflict reporting in action
Freedom of reporting: Vietnam
The Vietnam War gave the press, the military forces and the world a glimpse of modern 20th century conflicts. Some called it the last “Freedom” war as journalists were free to roam around at their own risks, getting any stories which they could find and given a free ride or flight to file their story. It was the first TV war as images reached the audiences worldwide within hours of being shot. Technology was already a major part of reporting at large: the typewriter and telephone calls to the editors of the Korean War had given space to satellite slots, super 8 cameras and daily commercial flights between Saigon, the US and Europe. Images of bombings, executions, children suffering and the evacuation of US and European citizens from the US Embassy in Saigon and Phnom Penh still remain in adult minds worldwide.
It was also a war “lost” by the media as generals and politicians criticized numerous on occasions the lack of objectivity and patriotism on the part of American and Western reporters. John Pilger, a former reporter in Vietnam, put it simply as a failure due to “incompetence in a racist war”. Some in the French intelligentsia -as they like to be called- claim that the Vietnam War was the last colonial war. Generally, as time, academic studies and empirical evidences show, condemning the media as the culprits of such a defeat was a myth. As T. Allan in The Media of Conflict Chapter War Reporting (p.198) summed it up: ”the points of disagreement between members of the US political and military elite became more publicly salient, [as] more critical forms of reporting began to emerge to test the limits of the slowly fragmenting elite consensus”.
In Vietnam, hacks, young or old, only did their job by reporting what they were seeing in situ and following their own judgement. To the US army, it appeared that the freedom of press blindly granted to the media to report a war against “evil” didn’t pay any dividend in winning the conflict and the hearts at home. Added to this, the belief of un-patriotism on the part of foreign editors made an US general declare that in the future, “the press would have to be compelled to toe the line”. In other terms, the birth of what is generally referred to “embedded journalism”.



Total “Blackout” conflicts
When the Task Force was launched by Margaret Thatcher in April 1982 to regain control of South Georgia island and the Falklands, the Ministry of Defence (MOD) had already in place a mass-communication PR strategy. One of the main points was to have a total blackout of independent news reaching Britain and for this, the MOD had elaborated a plan to “contain” the press. One of the directives was to take “selected” journalists with “minders” on board the vessels (an action referred as “pooling”) and “giving them training and military suits” as if they were part of the British army. By the time the journalists reached the war zone, a sense of combined jingoism, patriotism and self-censorship and the reluctance of the British Navy to send the reporters’ messages to their editors in the UK, made the stories on the home ground pure propaganda. The British media was divided either supporting “their” boys (like the Murdoch press, The Economist and others) or offering the public a more neutral, objective and impartial view. Whatever the dilemmas at home, the MOD “won” the media war by applying a new press management in wartime and the war zone. In that strategic plans, they may have had Winston Churchill in mind:
a warship in action has no space for a journalist”.
However, it was not only the British press, the Argentinians had the same approach by releasing only “good” and censored news like the success of the invasion and later the sinking of the Sheffield[3] but never mentioning the Argentinian forces surrendering (without resistance) in South Georgia[4].

As we have seen earlier, the pooling and “embracing” of British-only reporters in Her Majesty’s Navy produced stories through the press that were in line with what the MOD was seeking: reporters were the lawyers of the public interest. As Hallin and Gitlin put it: “Media in wartime aspire to reflect their public, by celebrating consensual values and emphasising their own responsiveness to the popular mood.” For some journalists, the “enrolment” was like being “totally prisoners of the MOD” (John Shirleys, Sunday Times). For others on the navy side, it was a perfect “controlled war” and “censors delight” (Morley Safer, CBS News). When Margaret Thatcher broke the news saying:
"Just rejoice at that news![5] for once, it was the army and the government having the scoop!
The same techniques of press containment were developed further in subsequent conflicts. The military forces from each country had learnt the lessons from Vietnam, the British MOD way of media management during the Falklands conflict, and its consequent mock exams by the US forces in Grenada (1983) and Panama (operation Just Cause in 1989). In this respect, more recently and being economical with the truth, the total blackout of the Sri Lanka war against the Tamils Tiger fighters (LLTE) follows that strategy to avoid “cameras on the battlefields” at all costs.
However, the Falklands War should have given the media a sense of the dangers in controlled reporting. Not at all.

3.3 Controlled and open Journalism
The first Iraq War (IW1) which started 20 years ago with the first air strike on Baghdad (17th Jan 1991) was reported live on CNN. It provided with hindsight a new trend that is still followed by most of the war reporters nowadays: “embedded journalism”. This pseudo-journalism is the attachment of reporters to the military forces. James Rodgers, former BBC war correspondent in Chechnya, rather speaks of the difference between “controlled” and “open” reporters which seems more accurate.
During the IW1 (1991) -and IW2 (2003)-, the propaganda machine of the Western allies was in perfect motion. Most of the reporters were in pools called Media  Reporting Teams (MRT) with forbidden areas of reporting (eg. spontaneous interviews with servicemen, filming of injured soldiers, civilian casualties, etc.): anything which could have upset the viewers at home. As this was the first 24-hour TV war with a global broadcast, a concept emerged soon after the launch of operations: the “CNN effect“ where the military had to answer almost live on planned or spontaneous events to serve multiple different cultural audiences around the world.
Generals Schwartzkopf and Colin Powell became real celebrities giving their “blessings” urbi et orbi to the start of the operation Sand Storm and the bombardment of the Iraq “infrastructure”. As it soon appeared from the CNN images, civilians suffered heavy losses and new semantics emerged. Orwellian vocabulary like “collateral damage”, “surgical strikes”, “smart bombs”, were across the headlines in the reports from the front line. Hearing such terms for the first time, you thought you heard an unusual slip of tongue from Michael Buerk. Those terms reflect the “sanitising” of war “on grounds of tone and taste” (Knightley op cit.) from the first person who brought death and famine to the British viewers for their evening meal...
Such euphemisms were further developed during the IW2. But it is to the credit of some press organs (The Independent) that they withdrew their staff from the MRTs, and to some journalists such as John Simpson for the BBC or Brent Sadler from ITN, that they reported freely (according to their own words) from Baghdad. It is also to the credit and credibility of the BBC and CNN, at that time, that they broadcasted live from Iraq’s capital despite the critics and that they were nicknamed the Baghdad Broadcasting Corporation and the “the voice of Saddam” for CNN.
John Simpson who was accused of being a puppet in the hands of Saddam Hussein declared that “the British public need to be better educated to war reporting”.
The IW1 (or Gulf War or even Persian war as it was/is still wrongly called) underlined the strategic approach of the military to control the reporters and the media in general and serve the global public with a new orwellian prose. Truth from the armed force side became a glossary of technological terms.
IW1 is still remembered as the first “Nintendo War” (in reference to the first console game) showing not the suffering and blood but graphic and night images. It was also the end of the Western unilateral view of the world with the emergence of new satellite channels like Al Jazeera.
These new concepts were renewed in other conflicts (Kosovo, Afghanistan) and in the second Iraq War which became the first Internet conflict reported live and the stuttering of citizen journalism.

Conclusion and further reflection
Very often truth and war are antinomic values. Philip Knightley (p.525) concludes regarding the conflict in Kosovo that: “The sad truth is that in the new millenium, government propaganda prepares its citizens for war so skilfully that it is quite likely that they do not want the truthful, objective and balanced reporting that good war correspondents once did their best to provide.” Indeed war correspondents are an endangered species, and not for the right reasons! The role of journalists in a new world media order is becoming increasingly more challenging. The Internet and its “citizen reporting” are still not prevailing and is very often a source of controversial facts and sometimes misinformation. The military forces and their propaganda support play with the medias in order to bias the public to whatever cause.
However, the new technological tools allow reporters to be independent, autonomous and in quasi-permanent contact with their office despite tighter budgets. But, unlike The Economist’s guideline for the IW1 (“The truth must await the end of the fighting”) and controlled or “pooled” journalists, the independent, objective, impartial and neutral reporter will become the voice of credibility and truth in any conflict zone. For this, he or she should learn from the “bayonet baby” effect, avoid honey traps and freebies from any side and put into context any military, political and commercial bias conflicts can bring. Finally, armed conflict reporters need to ignore the Douglas Hurd’s ostrich policy on Bosnia: “People reject and resent what is going on [massacres, ethnic cleansing] because they know it more vividly than before”, and follow Martin Bell “as if the world would be a better place if the killing continued and yet we knew nothing about it” (In Harm Way p.155) .
In a world where values are connected more with celebrities than philosophers, conflicts correspondents have an opportunity to provide impartial reporting and, infinitely but possibly: peace. As Aristotle wrote: “ΠΑΝΤΕΣ ΑΝΘΡΩΠΟΙ ΤΟΥ ΕΙΔΕΝΑΙ ΟΡΕΓΟΝΤΑΙ ΦΥΣΕΙ.” (“All humans by nature desire to know.” Metaphysics, Book 1) and with knowledge and truth, war and its horrors can remain memories of the past.

Bibliography:
Allan, S. (2004) News Culture. Buckingham: Open University Press

Allen, T. and Seaton, J. (eds) (1999) The media of conflict: War reporting and representation of ethnic violence. London: Zed

Bell, Martin (1995) In Harm’s Way. Penguin

Behr, E. (1992), Anyone here been raped and speaks English. London: Penguin

Carruthers, Susan (2000) The Media at War. London: Macmillan

Conrad, J (1899) Heart of the Darkness, Blackwoods Magazine, Edinburgh

Davies, Nick (2009), Flat Earth News, London: Vintage Book

Gowans, S. (2001) Truth is the first casualty of war: Often uttered, rarely learned, http://www.mediamonitors.net/gowans13.html Accessed on 03/01/11

Gowin, Nik (1994) Real time coverage of armed conflicts, JFK School of Government, Working Paper. Boston

Grossman, Vassily (2006) A writer at war. London: Pimlico Publising

Hallin, D. (1986) The Uncensored War. Oxford: Oxford University Press


Herr, Michael (1979) Dispatches. Picador

Keeble, R. (1997) Secret State, Silent Press: New Militarism, the Gulf and the Modern Image of Warfare, Luton: John Libbey Media. Univerity of Luton

Keeble, R. (2007)edited with Sarah Maltby, Communicating War: Memory, Media and Military. Bury St Edmund: Arima Publishing

Keeble, R. (2000), Hiding the horror of humanitarian warfare; Journal of Communication and Culture, European Institute for Communication and Culture;
Vol 7 No 3, 2000

Kellner, D. (1992) The Persian Gulf TV War. Boulder: Westview Press

Knightley, P. (2000) The first casualty. From the Crimea to Kosovo: The war correspondent as hero, propagandist and mythmaker. London: Quartet

Marr, Andrew (2004) My Trade. London: MacMillan

Morrison, D. and H.Tumber (1988) Journalists at War. London: Sage

Nick D. (2009), Flat Earth News. London: Vintage Publishing

Novak, Mark (2009) Coal Moountain Elementary. Minneapolis: Coffee House Press

Paterson, C. and A. Sreberny (2004) International News in the Twenty-First Century. Luton: John Libbey Publishing.

Philo, G.  ed (1999) Message Received. Essex: Longman

Arthur Ponsonby, Falsehood in Wartime: Propaganda Lies of the First World War (1928) in http://www.vlib.us/wwi/resources/archives/texts/t050824i/ponsonby.html (accessed on 04/01/11)

Reed, John (1977) Ten Days that Shook the World. London: Penguin

Savich, C. (2003) The First Casualty in War (Reisen in das Land der Kriege: Erlebnisse eines Fremden in Jugoslawien). Novi Sad: Prometej Publisher (Serbian title: Putovanja u Zemlju Ratova: Dozivljaji jednog Stranca u Yugoslaviji).

Taylor, P.  (1992) War and the Media: Propaganda and Persuasion in the Gulf War. Manchester: Manchester University Press

Thussu, D.K. and Freedman, D (2003) War and the Media. London: Sage

Tumber, H. and Webster, F (2006) Journalists Under Fire: Information War and Journalistic Practice. London: Sage

Wright, Evan (2004) Generation Kill. London: Corgi

Zelizer, B. and S. Allen (ed) (2002) Journalism After September 11. London: Routledge

Websites


Digital Journalist http://www.digitaljournalist.org/issue0212/pt01.html (Accessed: 03 January 2011)

France2 http://www.france2.fr/

France24 http://www.france24.com/fr/

The Guardian http://www.guardian.co.uk/ (Accessed: 03 January 2011)

ITV http://www.itv.com/news/?intcmp=NAV_NEWS5 (Accessed: 04 January 2011)

Hill and Knowlton http://www.hillandknowlton.com/citizensforafreekuwait  (Accessed: 03 January 2011)

History of War http://www.historyofwar.org/articles/wars_gulf1990.html (accessed on 04 January 2011)

Media Monitors http://www.mediamonitors.net (accessed on 04 January 2011)

Rodgers, J. blog http://rodgersjamesm.livejournal.com/ Mining disasters, journalism, and justice  (Accessed: 03 January 2011)

Filmography
Pilger, J (2001), Frontline, In Search Of Truth In Wartime, ITV

Pilger, J (2010), The War You Don't See, ITV

Coppola, F. (1979) Apocalypse Now, CMNI Zoetrope Production

Curtis, A. (2004), The Power of Nightmares (2004), BBC

Pictography
Lindsay, Norman (1916) The Bulletin
File written by Adobe Photoshop® 4.0













Teleography
BBC, BBC1 Ten O’Clock News

BBC, BBC2 Newsnight
BskyB, Sky News
CNN
France24 (Audiovisuel Exterieur de la France – AEF)
ITN, ITV News at Ten



[2] See Ben Works, Military Affairs Analyst for Fox News and CNN on the refugee’s emergency camp manipulation of the British media – 15 June 1998 – http://www.truthinmedia.org/bulletins/tim98-6-4.html (accessed on 03 January 2011)
[4] Without news from the British side and the impression that the British Navy had suffered major vessels, the French public, had the feeling that the Argentinians were winning the conflict thanks to the very much mediated fact that the Exocet missiles were a French product.

Personal experience: a meeting with pleural empyema


Words: 524

The one-centimetre thick tube was forcing its passage steadily through my skin, ribs, flesh. When reaching the lung, a torrent of pus flowed straight out into a receptacle. Within a few seconds it was full.

“Excellent!” shouted the consultant who was directing the operation, “Almost two pints! Faster than in a pub! Well done!”.

This condition, pleural empyema, can strike anyone with rates of mortality reaching 50%. It starts with a pneumonia which develops into a pleural effusion -excessive fluid in the lungs- and that liquid changes into pus which solidifies. From being breathless, you cannot breath anymore…

According to the latest report from the ONS[1] on causes of death in the UK, pneumonia kills half a million people a year.

“We used to have an average of a person a day arriving at A&E with such a condition, now it’s two”, says Dr. Rebecca Lyall, at the time, consultant in thoracic surgery at the Whittington Hospital, London.

And the figures are increasing worldwide for unknown reasons, with the young the most affected. There are fears that a vaccine in immunisation programmes could be contributing to this rise.

A study[2] in Scotland shows a four fold increase in 25 years in purulent pleuritis
(another name for pleural empyema). In Canada, a survey directed[3]  by Christian Fenton of the University of British Columbia shows a 400% rise in children under ten in ten years.

The sources for the disease can be bacterial, viral and fungal. But the reason remains a mystery to the scientific community.

When I reached A&E, a wave of media frenzy paranoia described the London underground as full of bacteria and virus.

GPs were advising the elderly and people at risk (like myself) to avoid the Tube.
Dr Ben Croxford of University College London calculated that a person spending
20 minutes in the most polluted part of the London Underground will inhale the equivalent of a cigarette. His research was followed by publications in the press
(The Independent, The Evening Standard) and on the BBC[4].

It took nearly three years for  the independent Institute of Occupational Medicine[5] to reach the conclusion that the Tube is neither harmful nor dangerous for the travelling public. However, it stated that “there is some increase in risk of pneumonia”.

Geoff Martin, Press Officer of the LMU, says: “we are still investigating such findings as we need to protect our members in one way or another”.

Nick Anthonisen, the Kojak-lookalike editor of the Canadian Respiratory Journal, concluded during an interview that despite all the surveys and facts, with the increase of pleural empyema: “we are left with a provocative finding without a clear explanation”.

Upon my discharge from the hospital, Dr Lyall, while arranging her blonde hair,
told me: “You had a chance out of a million to have contracted an atypical empyema and we don’t know why. You were just unlucky. If you had waited a day or two, you wouldn’t be here.

I resumed taking the underground only three years later. The following week,
I missed a Piccadilly line train by a couple of minutes with a suicide bomber inside.
I feel lucky.


[1] ONS (2006), Mortality Statistics, Series DH2 no.32
[2] Roxburgh CSD, Youngson GG, Townend JA, Turner SW. Trends in pneumonia and empyema in Scottish children in the past 25 years. Arch Dis Child. 2008;93;316–8 37.

[3] Finley C, Clifton J, FitzGerald JM, Yee J. Empyema: an increasing concern in Canada. Can Respir J. 2008;15(2):85–9.effusions. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2004;170:49–53.

[4] http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/2211929.stm (accessed on 25th January 2011)
[5] p.57 “Assessment of health effects of long-term occupational exposure to tunnel dust in the London Underground “
JF Hurley1, JW Cherrie1,2, K Donaldson3, A Seaton1,2 and CL Tran1.

A Royal Headache

 
Words: 524 words

Prince William and Kate Middleton’s wedding faces disruption from radical elements of the public. Buckingham Palace is keeping its nerve. Indeed, the royal wedding of the decade may experience some turbulence. And we are not talking about the capricious and unpredictable British weather!
On 29th April, in “the biggest TV event with an audience of 4 billion people” according to Euromonitor International, His Royal Highness Prince William of Wales will marry Miss Catherine Middleton, a commoner. Without stuttering, they will say: “I do”, the British way to commit to reciprocal love and trust.
Love and trust they will need, and not only from each other!
The London Metropolitan Police and Westminster Council will not comment at this stage regarding arrangements, and strikes. The capital will be on high alert and the St James area closed 24 hours before
the Rolls-Royce Phantom VI carrying Miss Middleton reaches Westminster Abbey.

The most hated Londoner, according to the city newspaper The Evening Standard, Bob Crow from the RMT, has called for coordinated strike action and civil disobedience in protest at the Government’s planned job cuts without giving a specific date.
The potential strikes may turn the fairy tale into a 29/4 British day of misery: no underground services, grid-locked streets, overloaded police and medical services, and potential student disruption of the royal procession from Westminster Abbey to Buckingham Palace.
The ASLEF (tube drivers) representative, Craig Smith, denies such action: “it was pure invention from one of your hacks and it went snowballing”. Geoff Martin for the LMU (tube workers) was categorical: “we never ever mentioned that we will strike for the wedding”. At other unions’ offices (firemen, students, BA), the same tune is de vigueur: “No strike on 29th!”
But, are the unions taken over by their basis?
On the Victoria line –carrying 4 million travellers a day and serving the main London sites-, a worker behind the ticket barrier, Ahmed Patel, says that “a strike will show them how we are treated. And some drivers may take a sickie [a day off for medical reasons].”
James, a Geography student -as HRH Prince William was at Edinburgh University- from Westminster University, declares: “we cannot agree that William didn’t pay any university fees. I am facing a steep £9,000 [equiv. USD15,000] a year from 2012! Is this democracy? We are ready for any action on
29th April!”

Joe Little, managing editor of Majesty (“the Quality Royal Magazine”), has 45 years’ experience of glam and celebrity weddings.
Wearing tweed and tie, the very British gentleman from his office on Charlotte Street, above a newsagent corner shop run by a Pakistani, explains why the unions will not strike. “The British public will be outraged! And it will be a catastrophic PR exercise by the unions! Will and Kate’s wedding is a break from tradition. A new royal generation!”
Whatever the weather, strikes, transport troubles, the London Pearly Kings and Queens Club will do the necessary for a “perfect day”. With “the shiniest and most elaborate outfits”, their old-fashioned elderly ladies and gentlemen members will play an active part in the wedding by raising money for charities.
John Waters, Pearly King of Highbury, doesn’t lose his British impassive way: “We will go on
shanks’s pony [Queen’s English for walking]. Nothing will stop us from enjoying our future King
and Queen’s wedding! All of those threats are porky pies! [lies in Cockney slang]”.

Buckingham Palace and Clarence House -Princes Charles and William official’s offices- may feel relief hearing that.

Short appendix for further development involving multimedia and social media.
Multimedia:
-Short animation showing Catherine Middleton’s Rolls-Royce through the street of St James
-Graphics showing London’s areas affected with no-go zones and closed streets
-Short animation showing the procession and arrangements from Westminster Abbey to Buckingham Palace
-Showing interviews with the London Pearly Kings and Queens Club Members in their full attire
-Live link with people queueing overnight for best views
-Biographies and history of PW and CM relationship
-Short animation showing how strikers could disrupt the day with the most strategic points
-Showing interviews with masked students saying that they will attack the convoy
-Develop iPad app for royal agenda
Social Media:
-Create 1 x Twitter account for live reporting on wedding (managed by Joe Little of Majesty Magazine)
-Create 1 x Twitter account for tips for best places to see and be seen (managed by Joe Little of Majesty Magazine)
-Create 1 x Facebook club for PM and CM’s wedding support and book of best wishes + other apps
-Create 1 x Facebook club for gossips starting with: “Is Kate pregnant?”
-Create 1 x MySpace club as above
-Create a poll for social networks: “For or Against the wedding”
-Create account on YouTube and similars for uploading the wedding videos with a prize for the best video
-Create an account on Flickr and similars for uploading the wedding pictures with a prize for the best video
All:
-Create interlinks between multimedia and social networks

If the guillotine were still around, bankers would be an endangered species!


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  • Words: 1, 526

« If the guillotine were still around, bankers would be an endangered species! » Yves Thueux, the Toulouse primary school teacher holds bankers across the world responsible for the current economic climate affecting European countries and the substantial loss in his public pension.

« Bankers just suck money from poor people and take away jobs leading to high unemployment», the words of the 45 year-old father of two epitomizes the feelings shared by the majority of the French “classe moyenne”, and possibly some members of the British middle class.

Both economies are struggling to come out of the recession and share the same sad statistics: in the UK, 2.5 million people are without a job according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS)[1] and in France, the figure is 2.6 million according to the National Institute of Statistics and Economics Studies[2].

Chris Brown, a former IT consultant for Computacenter, was made redundant back in December 2008. The sudden drop in his family income gives him second thoughts on how the economy is run. Despite his wife, Tracey, working for Camden Council as a family manager, he says: “we have to be careful with the money, holidays to Disneyland and Italy are over for a while”. But they don’t blame the Labour government. “This is an international and global crisis. It could have been Gordon Brown [no family relation] or Tony Blair to blame. But remember that it’s Gordon Brown who saved the world banking system”.

For Chris, the bonuses awarded by the major banks JP Morgan, RBS alike to their top employees “should be given back to the community. We are in a pure liberal logic: whatever you did for someone in the past, they may not help you in return!”

A new economy emerges. People wait until the sales to buy or they go to the auctioneers. Alex Smith from Criterion Auctioneers in Islington, London, wouldn’t comment on her company profits but says that “everything is going up, except wages!”

The front-desk accountant explains that most of the small value objects go quickly under the auctioneer’s hammer while large and expensive ones tend to take longer to find a buyer. A regular bidder noted that “most of the buyers are from Russia. It seems they don’t know the recession!”. A perception shared by some in France.

Jean-François Guignard, working for an estate agent, spends a week a year fully paid in Britain “to improve his English” for his clients. He analyses that the real estate prices in Toulouse “are still going up despite people suffering unemployment and debts. Why?
It is very easy to answer: Russian oligarchs are investing massively in the top towns in France! My partner and I would like to buy a bigger place, but we simply can’t,
too pricey! Sincerely, the global recession hasn’t affected us.”

Yves Thueux also still feels lucky.  “My wife and I are both teachers and we have a relatively confortable life. We spend our holidays in Corsica and go skiing for a few days in winter”. But, this is a change from past years. The Thueux family used to spend
two months abroad for the summer holidays and rent a small cottage in the Pyrénées for a week for skiing.

For retired people, a common topic of conversation is prices. With inflation now on a 3.7% annual basis trend as per the latest Bank of England figures[3], prices are eating some disposable income from lower earners. Margaret “Maggy” Hills is 74 and a former postwoman. “I have the fuel allowance but with such months as November and December, I spend most of my money on gas and electricity bills.”

The well-spoken, rosy-checked pensioner does not think of herself. She wishes that the government will “give jobs to the young ones, otherwise they will create trouble like the students”. To the question if bankers should give their bonus to the community, she replies that “in my time, it would have been scandalous to hear that bankers were lottery millionaires on a weekly basis; everyone was sharing. But we still do it: look at the millions normal people send to Children in need”.

A former mechanic, Adamo Celantano, from North London, has switched from shopping at Waitrose to Morrisons. “It makes a difference of £80-100 at the end of the month! Waitrose are now selling basic discounted products but they are still expensive for vegetables, meat and fish.” The sturdy mustachio panama holder with immaculate finger nails found a solution to balance the two choices. “When I have guests around, I go to Waitrose for the desserts and cook the other ingredients from Morrisons. They don’t see the difference because I throw away the plastic bags and packaging! Every pound counts at the end.”

Francine Henry works in a library in Paris and has a 38-year old daughter living in London. “We have more and more readers! I think people read more to escape the reality and buy fewer books. When I hear my daughter saying that the British government is closing libraries by the hundreds, I get very angry! People wherever in the world should have free access to books.”

The soft spoken trilingual professional regards the bankers’ bonus as “incoherent” in a modern society which is based on social values. “My parents fought for their social rights like la Sécurité Sociale [French equivalent of the NHS] and our pensions on a mutual contract between employers, employees and the State. Nowadays, this is over: the rich are getting richer and the poor poorer. I think the recession is affecting the US and the UK more than any other country. But because France has a decent social framework in contrast to the UK and the US, our quality of life is not affected too much.”

We talked to two bankers to gauge their opinion on bonuses and disparity in the community with the economic downturn.

Pascal Point is head of senior accounts (in other words, people of an income above £100,000 a year) for Crédit Agricole for the south-west of France. His office has impregnable views on the green hills of the Toulouse region.

“We have fewer new clients coming to us. This is simply because we have fewer people earning more. Saying that the rich are getting richer is a pure fallacy! Just look at the wealth of the top 100 people in the world and you will see that their fortune have lowered over the last two years due to their company shares going south.” The 43-year old rugby fanatic and player explains that the economic impact of the recession reaches all the layers of society. “I was talking to a client last week and she told me that over the last two Christmases her family stayed at home instead of flying to the French Antilles. Holidays have been “self cut” not only for the wealthy but from the bottom to the top”.

Pascal Point, a self-confessed poker player, sees the end of the tunnel in economic terms by 2012 and quotes Helmut Kohl, the former German Chancellor: “Today’s profits are the investments of tomorrow and the jobs of the day after”. We have to follow that maxim.”

Albert Breton[4] of Carrousel Capital Ltd of Piccadilly, London, is a senior executive with the hedge fund company which specialises in discretionary long-term hedged positions in closed-end funds[5] across the globe.

The London-Paris weekly commuter won’t talk about his company’s dealings and investments but sees the bonus as a measure of keeping the crème de la crème in the financial industry. “Because instruments are increasingly complex, their management require specialists who can understand finance, arbitrage pricing, manipulate the data and have a sound understanding of the markets. Bonuses are the carrot of the bankers, without them the finance industry won’t progress.” In other industries, some disagree with such a view.

Northamptonshire, Towcester, a former Roman town. John Carrington is optometrist. “My clients need to come to see me as sight is a vital function. There could be a recession or not, people need health firstly. So I haven’t seen a fall in visits. However, on the shop side, we sell fewer designer frames. But because the manufacturers are reducing their prices, most people still buy the likes of Armani, DNKY and so on”. The Jamaican-Austrian British eye specialist thinks that: “the trouble with economy in general is that the unexpected is very often the norm. Paying billions of pounds to people who cannot put the market forces right is a paradox of our modern society. It has to be the politicians which lead the economics because the ultimate differentiator is people!”

A point that some have forgotten in their opulent and elite positions.




[3] http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/index.htm
[4] Name has been changed
[5] CEF are funds with limited number of shares and redeemable for cash when the fund liquidates.

Academic commentary on constraints of UK and French journalists


Compare the roles of responsibilities and constraints on journalists in your country of origin with those in the UK.  Make reference to regulatory frameworks in those countries and include a literature review.
Marks will be awarded for knowledge, understanding, style, structure (academic conventions, introduction and conclusion, bibliography, citation) and accuracy (grammar, spelling, word use, punctuation).

Words: 2,927


In the name of Freedom

Introduction
Freedom of speech can only exist by respecting law, and law applies constraints on all.

In Western democracies, the main restrictive laws which journalists have to be aware of are contempt, libel, defamation, privacy and copyright. We will see how in France and the UK the “reach” of different acts can differ and we will focus on libel and privacy laws affecting journalists in both countries.

For most people, journalists are the principal source of information either on TV, radio, online or paper. Across several countries, codes emphasise the role and responsibilities of reporting. Most of those codes are based on three principles: freedom of the press, voluntary participation and ethical standards.


Part I – Legal constraints for journalists in France and the UK
No one should ignore the law.

The main reasons why journalists need to be legally aware knowing about specific laws are that some restrict publications and the fact that their articles may cover legal matters.

The legal constraints on journalists in the UK and France are mainly to be found in the Official Secrets Act of 1989, Contempt of Court of 1981, Human Rights Act of 1998 for the UK and the 1881 Loi sur la Liberté de la Presse (“Press Freedom Act”). Alongside a set of laws dealing with defamation and libel, privacy, copyright, obscenity, public order, racism and data. Two types of law stand out from the others: the civil libel/defamation laws (referred to “libel”) in the UK (England and Wales) and the laws related to privacy in France.

As per Frances Quinn, “Law for Journalists”: England’s [defamation laws] are considered to make life more difficult for the media than the laws in many other countries, [this] is one of the most important areas for a journalist to know” (p.181).

Defamation, also known as calumny, slander and most often by the press “libel” is a statement claiming, stating or implying a negative image. The English laws on the subject are so tough that (rich) individuals and companies from around the world bring their cases to the UK to clear their name and seek compensation.

In fact, journalists must be careful when making (false?) allegations and/or statements. Because the laws are so rigid in these matters and the number of cases are so high, it is very often referred to as “libel taylorism”.

An important fact to remember regarding the UK is what is often called “libel tourism”. Because the allegations can be read in the UK through published sources (print and Internet) even if the original document didn’t originate there, the claimant(s) can bring the case to court. Very often, the defence over libel is based on the reference to the European Human Rights Convention and the Freedom of speech.

The advantages of the defamation laws for UK reporters are summarised in ten points under the Reynolds/Jameel standards.

Responsible journalism is protected through effective defences as it is listed in the “1999 Reynolds criteria” of Lord Nicholls and updated in 2006 by the House of Lords in the case Jameel v Wall Street Journal (HoL 2006)[1]. Tom O'Malley in ”Regulating the press” (2007) sums up what is now known as the Reynolds/Jameel standards: “it encourages responsible and fair journalism in the public interest and provides a reasonable defence to journalists who make honest mistakes”.

Finally, the libel set of laws protect the journalists and act as a deterrent because of the costs, risks and consequences of losing libel actions as the cases of Jonathan Aitkens against the Guardian or the downfall of former Lord Jeffrey Archer can prove.

From the other side, however, the disadvantages for UK journalists regarding libel laws must set off alarm bells in any newsroom when an allegation is made. Firstly, the odds for journalists are low in front of juries. Secondly, the costs of winning libel action are dwarfed by the damages. The third paradoxical point is the fact that with the introduction of the Conditional Fee Agreements (CFAs), the number of people suing for libel has increased and consequently action against journalists and publishers too.

In France, in contrast to the other side of the Channel, the press is regulated through the 1881 “Loi sur la liberté de la presse” (“Press Freedom Act”) updated in 2010[2]. It defines the responsibilities and freedoms of the French press, imposing a legal framework on any publication, and public display. La Loi sur la Presse -as it is referred to- recognises the principle of a repressive control of publications by the judicial authority to sanction and to repair the damages under the “Abus de la liberté d'expression”(“Abuse of the freedom of speech”)). The law defines, libel, defamation and other matters under the “Délits de Presse” (“Press Offenses”) such as offending the President. It is very precise as the compulsory mention of the flanel panel (“L’ours”) in each publication. Moreover, the French Press Freedom Act states that the publisher is criminally responsible to the courts of the actions and writings of its employees and journalists.

Finally, the concept of “Exceptio veritatis” (latin for “Exception of the Truth”) in the 1881 law encapsulates most of the libel and defamation cases. The exceptio veritatis is the way of reporting the facts that have been recognized as defamatory and as such it can not always be reported. This is the case with regards to privacy.

The only important text relating directly to privacy in France is Article 9 of the French Civil Code (”Code civil français”) stating that: "Everyone has the right to respect for his privacy." There are also the article 226 et al of the Code Pénal (“Criminal Code”) which lists the penalties. Furthermore, the Constitutional Council considers that the right to privacy derives from Article 2 of the Declaration of Human Rights and Citizens of the French Revolution of 1789. But there is no legal definition of privacy as such.

However, with these legal texts the legislator is protecting the privacy of people and details of their private lives cannot be exhibited or published in public without their agreement. In other words, the breach of one’s privacy is a punishable crime. In France, journalists, editors and publishers are very aware of this. Added to the French taboo about looking at others private gardens, you have the legal and social barriers and this explains why celebrities’ personal lives do not make scoops.

As we can notice in France and in the UK, reporting constraining laws provide a legal framework in both countries. Very often these sets of laws “clash” with freedom of speech in two conflicting ways. First, Article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights of 1950 and the UK Human Rights of 1998 [3] permit restrictions on freedom of speech when necessary to protect the reputation or rights of others. The other side is found on the essence of the freedom of speech, where freedom stops and libel begins. Between both lie the codes of conduct and self-regulation.


Part II – Codes and self-regulation
In the UK, everyone can  call themselves journalists without having proper and official training or a diploma. There are two general sector differences for journalists in the UK: the press and broadcasting. 

There is no specific legal statutory control of the press in the UK. Instead it is self-regulated and follows a set of codes. In theory, it is assumed that journalists know these and follow them.


The UK press is regulated through the Press Complaints Commission (PCC) which is responsible to the Editors’ Code of Practice. This code has 16 clauses[4] listing general principles. The National Union of Journalists has set its own Code of Conduct[5] which includes 14 points to follow. Altogether, they cover in broad terms accuracy, attribution, the opportunity for reply, respect for privacy, harassment, intrusion into shock or grief, the interests and protection of children, entry into hospitals, the reporting of crime, the use of clandestine devices and subterfuge, the protection of victims of sexual assault, discrimination, financial journalism, the protection of confidential sources, payment for information for trials and to criminals.

In practice, journalists and newspaper editors ignore most of these non-legally binding codes. For example, both of the codes as PCC’s code iii) stipulates that “it is unacceptable to photograph individuals in private places without their consent.” NUJ point 5, “A journalist shall obtain information, photographs and illustrations only by straightforward means”. The number of times which “private” pictures are on the cover of the tabloid newspapers in the UK or the glossy Paris-Match magazine, may suggest otherwise. Recent developments in the “phone hacking” scandal hitting the News of the World demonstrates that the main points of the codes are ignored.

Because the PCC has no legal power nor can it impose fines, there is “a gentleman’s agreement” between the press and the Government on the fact that the press regulates itself by fear of the creation of a legal body to “frame” it.

On the other hand, broadcasting regulations are more binding. The Broadcasting Acts of 1990, 1996 and the Communications Act 2003 are enforced by OFCOM (formerly the ITC and Radio Authority) which ensures impartiality and “common sense” in terms of religion, politics and law. OFCOM has the powers to remove the licences from the operator as per the precedent of Med TV in 1999. In addition to those legal powers, OFCOM has developed lengthy codes which deal with content. Each code is very detailed and journalists in the private TV industry must follow these.

The BBC,  however, has its own legal framework and code of conduct. Established by a Royal Charter in 1926, The British Broadcasting Corporation is a public service broadcaster (PSB) with its own code, the Producers’ Guidelines[6] which applies for all platforms (online, paper, TV, radio) in addition to 167 set of other editorial guidelines from “Access Agreements” to “Writing Commitments”. Furthermore, the BBC sets compulsory training sessions for their journalists. To sum it up, BBC hacks have to be impartial and use fairness and common sense.

To date, the new media and its associated platforms are not regulated specifically. But as publishers on legal terms, UK journalists and any member of the public are subject to the acts of law (see further Part I).

All broadcasting platforms (TV, cable, satellite and Internet) in France are regulated by the CSA, or Conseil Supérieur de l´Audiovisuel following the French Broadcasting Act of 1986. It issues new licences and has legal constraints on the radio and television stations about political pluralism, protection of minors, the French language and advertising. But it has no guidelines, chart or code of conduct for journalists.

However, regarding the profession of the journalists, there is an “identity card” specifically for journalists delivered by the “Commission de la carte d’identité des journalistes professionnels”, without which you cannot use the profession’s name.

As in the UK, there is a code of conduct put together by the Syndicat National des Journalists (SNJ), the Charter of Deontology, the “Déclaration des devoirs et des droits des journalistes” (“Declaration of the duties and rights of the journalists”) and the “Charter of the Duties of the French professional journalists”[7].

However, the most referred to document for journalists in France is the Charter of Munich of 1971.[8]  It comprises ten duties that the journalists should follow from honesty and professionalism to protection of people privacy and their own social role. It lists as well the five rights of any reporter from freedom of speech to the right to have a decent income from the employer.

These codes of conduct are for all journalists across all the platforms (TV, print, radio, online). Finally, the freelancer journalists have since the Cressard Law in 1974, the same rights and duties of the professionals but without having the “Carte de presse”, the equivalent of permanent status.

In brief, the above French rules “road-map” the mission of the journalist: duty to inform, respect for the reader, the public interest, the right of knowledge and establish its credibility (independence against political and economic power, respect of privacy, protection of sources). As Sabrina Lavric, from the University of Nancy, in her article « Déontologie journalistique, simple formule magique ? »[9] crystalises it: “They are based on two fundamental principles: social responsibility and truthfulness, that is to say the intention is not to deceive its audience.”

We can see that there are similarities and differences in the responsibilities of French and British journalists in the general press and broadcasting sectors.

Similarities due to the fact that codes of conducts exist on both sides of the Channel on cover print and broadcast which cover the same matters. Similarities, as very often journalists ignore such codes like the disclosure of private matters about the French President’s wife, Carla Bruni-Sarkozy, and the recent phone hacking scandal (ref. above).

However, it appears that the French legislator through the “Press Freedom Act of 1881” and other structural controls of the profession provides more extensive regulations than their British counterpart. For the UK as Tom O’Malley et al noticed in Regulating the Press (2001, p.177), “statutory regulation of standards is neither new, nor easily resolved by appeal to the idea that such development would constitute a threat to press freedom”.

Having summarised the legal frameworks and codes of conduct for journalists, we have to consider the reporters ethics’.


Part III – At work and at heart: Ethics and moral issues in practice

In addition to this guidance at national level, journalists need to subscribe to the ethos, philosophy, house rules and style guides of their employer and/or commissioning party.

In the UK, for example, The Economist prides itself on the excellence of writing. Reuters defines its journalists through its “Standards and Value” section of their house Handbook[10]. In France, Le Monde has its Charter of Deontology and AFP is based on a law from 1957 that “defines its independence and the freedom of its journalists”[11]. These house rules provide another framework for the reporters and the line of thinking to follow. When these run out, the reporter is confronted with his or her own set: ethics, morals and self-censorship.

Nick Davies in “Flat Earth News” (2009) expresses the concerns that self-censorship is a constant in the news industry for two main reasons: costs of production and the need to increase the flow of revenue (p.114). This has produced a churnalism which he describes in nine rules to be avoided for the honest journalist. These range from the bias against truth (rule One), the need to run cheap stories to self-censorship (rule Three: avoid the electric fence). Indeed, the journalist in his search for truth needs to make some compromises whatever the causes (deadlines, budget, law, in-house rules or screaming editor!).


It is an even more difficult balancing act when the subject affects suffering. Alice Donald, Senior Research Fellow in the Human Rights and Social Justice Research Institute in London, stated that the “triangular relationship between the journalist, its audience and people suffering brings a moral and ethical responsibility to journalism”.[12]  

Indeed, reporters need to suspend their emotion and listen to other people. Like Charlie Beckett’s (former Channel 4 News Editor) slip of the tongue revealed when commenting about the London 7/7 tragedy. In his own words: “When I arrived at my desk, I knew that this [the London bombings] was a great story”. The comment epitomises the balance between suffering, audience and reporting: a great story but not for everyone.

The three model concept (journalist-audience-suffering) runs in parallel with the distance, compassion and pity dynamics. The challenge for reporters is to find a fine line between the “compassion fatigue” of the audiences, a “journalism of attachment” (sympathy in reporting) and the “pictures’ morality”. This brings limits (or other horizons) when reporting atrocities, conflicts and privacy according to the platforms (broadcasting, press, online), the programme format and the owner of content (see Luc Boltanski, Distant Suffering: Morality, Media and Politics” Cambridge University Press (French: 2007 and English: 1999). It is subliminally the differences between empathy and sympathy.

Conclusion
A matter at the heart of the duties and responsibilities of any hack is the employer. As Andrew Marr famously wrote in My Trade (2004): “It’s not an invariable truth that every proprietor of a British newspaper is mad” (p.236) and we could broaden it, not only to the press but to the whole industry.

In both France and the UK, a set of laws and codes represents the frameworks for journalism, in theory. Despite these, most often reporters are faced with their own ethics, morale and very often demons.

From The Sun’s “Gotcha” cover (O4/05/1982) celebrating the sinking of the General Belgrano warship to Paris-Match’s pictures of François Mitterrand on his death bed, whatever the national borders, morality and ethics appear not to be the quintessential values of the press on print and online.

Television due to its immediate cognitive impact on its audience remains more prone to morality and sanity and even “sanitisation” (censorship of atrocities committed in conflict).
However, the aspiring and professional reporters in respecting ethics, fairness, honesty, impartiality, probity and public accountability can give journalism back its aura and democratic duty.

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Teleography
BBC, BBC1 Ten O’Clock News

BBC, BBC2 Newsnight
BskyB, Sky News
CNN
CNBC
France2, Le Journal du 20h
France24 (Audiovisuel Exterieur de la France – AEF)
ITN, ITV News at Ten
TF1, TF1 Le 20heures
Websites
Article 19, http://www.article19.org/

BBC, http://www.bbc.co.uk (Accessed: January 2011)

Le Club Presse http://www.clubpresse.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1115&Itemid=133http://www.droitdesjournalistes.fr/droit-du-travail-et-droits-journalistes-pigistes--Francais,s,272

CNN, http://edition.cnn.com/ (Accessed: January 2011)

CRFJ, http://www.crfj.ch/public/page13.php?sm=6

The Economist, http://www.economist.com/ (Accessed: January 2011)

France2, http://www.france2.fr/ (Accessed: January 2011)

France24, http://www.france24.com/fr/ (Accessed: January 2011)

Financial Times, http://www.ft.com/ (Accessed: January 2011)

Le Figaro, http://www.lefigaro.fr/ (Accessed: January 2011)

The Guardian, http://www.guardian.co.uk/ (Accessed: January 2011)




Juriscom, http://www.juriscom.net/int/dpt/dpt21.htm

Juritravail, http://www.juritravail.com


Le Monde, http://www.lemonde.fr/ (Accessed: January 2011)

Polismedia, http://www.polismedia.org/workingpapers.aspx?id=20

Warwick University, http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/law/elj/eslj/issues/volume3/number1/morris_randle/


[2] For a full read, see official site (accessed on 01/02/11) http://www.legifrance.gouv.fr/affichTexte.do?cidTexte=LEGITEXT000006070722&dateTexte=20110202
[4] See Annexe 1, PCC Editors’ Code of Practice
[5] See Annexe 2, NUJ Code of Conduct
[6] See Appendix 3, BBC Production Guidelines
[7] See Annexe 4
[8] See Annexe 5 Charte de Munich 1971
[10] Reuters Handbook of Journalism
[12] Seminar on “Moral and Ethical Dimensions of Journalism” - 27/11/2010 London Metropolitan University