Home
  English
  Arabic
  Russian
  Chinese
Help the victims of war: make a donation to the ICRC today!
review-868-p879
31-12-2007  International Review of the Red Cross No 868, p. 879-891 by Daoud Kuttab
The media and Iraq: a blood bath for and gross dehumanization of Iraqis
While the end of the Saddam Hussein regime has reopened the way for vibrant media activity, the absence of security for members of the media has had a high human cost. The author further argues that there has been no serious attempt by the western or even Arab media to focus on the human side of Iraq. Iraqi civilian death tolls are treated as nothing more than statistics.

Daoud Kuttab
is an award-winning Palestinian journalist and a new media activist and entrepreneur. He is currently a Ferris Professor of Journalism at Princeton University.
Abstract
The war in Iraq has been accompanied by the highest ever number of casualties among members of the Iraqi and foreign press. While the end of the Saddam Hussein regime has reopened the way for vibrant media activity, the absence of security for members of the media has had a high human cost. The US-led war on Iraq, which was aimed at liberating its people from authoritarian rule, has not seen any serious attempt by the Western or even Arab media to focus on the human side of Iraq. Iraqi civilian death tolls are treated as nothing more than statistics.

pdf file Full text in PDF format  (119kb)
  About Acrobat PDF files

Other documents in this section:
Info resources > International Review > 2007 - No. 868 

go to top of page
Home | Site map | Search | What's new | Contacts | Copyright | Privacy policy  | RSS
© 2009  International Committee of the Red Cross
31-12-2007