Re: FEMA doesn't want you to see dead bodies in NO
- From: "Vox Knox" <iltorco@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 8 Sep 2005 01:39:47 -0400
"PirateJohn" <PirateJohn@xxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1126144032.128981.309960@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> NEW ORLEANS (Sept. 7) - When U.S. officials asked the media not to take
> pictures of those killed by Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath, they
> were censoring a key part of the disaster story, free speech watchdogs
> said on Wednesday.
>
> The move by the Federal Emergency Management Agency is in line with the
> Bush administration's ban on images of flag-draped U.S. military
> coffins returning from the Iraq war, media monitors said in separate
> telephone interviews.
>
> "It's impossible for me to imagine how you report a story whose subject
> is death without allowing the public to see images of the subject of
> the story," said Larry Siems of the PEN American Center, an authors'
> group that defends free expression.
>
> U.S. newspapers, television outlets and Web sites have featured
> pictures of shrouded corpses and makeshift graves in New Orleans.
>
> But on Tuesday, FEMA refused to take reporters and photographers along
> on boats seeking victims in flooded areas, saying they would take up
> valuable space need in the recovery effort and asked them not to take
> pictures of the dead .
>
> In an e-mail explaining the decision, a FEMA spokeswoman wrote: " The
> recovery of victims is being treated with dignity and the utmost
> respect and we have requested that no photographs of the deceased by
> made by the media."
>
> Efforts to recover bodies continued on Wednesday. Out in the city's
> filthy waters, rescue teams tied bodies to trees or fences when they
> found them and noted the location for later recovery before carrying on
> in search of survivors.
>
> Rebecca Daugherty of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press
> found this stance inexplicable.
>
> "The notion that, when there's very little information from FEMA, that
> they would even spend the time to be concerned about whether the
> reporting effort is up to its standards of taste is simply
> mind-boggling," Daugherty said. "You cannot report on the disaster and
> give the public a realistic idea of how horrible it is if you don't see
> that there are bodies as well."
>
> FEMA's policy of excluding media from recovery expeditions in New
> Orleans is "an invitation to chaos," according to Tom Rosenstiel,
> director of the Project for Excellence in Journalism, a part of
> Columbia University's journalism school.
>
> "This is about managing images and not public taste or human dignity,"
> Rosenstiel said. He said FEMA's refusal to take journalists along on
> recovery missions meant that media workers would go on their own.
>
> Rosenstiel also noted that U.S. media, especially U.S. television
> outlets, are generally reluctant to show corpses.
>
> "By and large, American television is the most sanitized television in
> the world," he said. "They are less likely to show bodies, they are
> less likely to show graphic images of the dead than any television in
> the world."
>
> There is also a question of what the American PEN Center's Siems called
> "international equity," noting that American news outlets cover stories
> around the world showing the effects of natural disasters and wars in
> graphic detail.
>
> "How is the world going to look at us if we go into their part of the
> world and we broadcast these images and we do not allow ourselves to
> look at such images when they're right in our own midst?" Siems said.
>
> Mark Tapscott, a former editor at the Washington Times newspaper who
> now deals with media issues at the Heritage Foundation, said the FEMA
> decision did not amount to censorship.
>
> "Let's not make a common decency issue into a censorship issue,"
> Tapscott said. "Nobody wants to wake up in the morning and see their
> dead uncle on the front page. That's just common decency."
Whatever the reason it is still censorship.
Vox Knox
.
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