Déjà Vu
In an eerie echo of the past, the American news
media have drastically underplayed genocide in Sudan’s
Darfur region just as they did a similar catastrophe in
Rwanda a decade ago. But some individual journalists
have done outstanding work.
By Sherry Ricchiardi Sherry Ricchiardi is
an AJR Senior Writer.
Emily Wax didn't
hesitate when a rebel leader offered her a lift in a
stolen Land Cruiser crammed with grenades, automatic
weapons and mortar shells. Three sharpshooters, perched
on the roof, scanned the desolate desert landscape as
they moved toward the death zones. Her relentless
lobbying with the Sudanese Liberation Army had paid off.
To get to the rebel encampment and waiting escort,
the Washington Post reporter had to sneak across the
border from neighboring Chad and wade into rain-swollen
riverbeds, precariously balancing a laptop on her head.
A gaunt, ragged fighter ferried her satellite phone.
For three weeks, Wax roamed the rebel-held Darfur
region of Sudan, living off dates and gristly chunks of
antelope killed by a sniper named Isaac, who doubled as
a chef.
When the Land Cruiser got hopelessly stuck, Wax
crawled into a sea of mud to help dig it out. At times,
there were torrential rains and blinding sandstorms that
turned the sky bright orange. Baby Wipes and breath
mints became precious possessions in a place where "the
bitter smell of the dead hung in the hot air," as Wax
described the scene in a September 7 story.
"There is such a small group of us covering it. When
we don't go in, it means Americans don't see what's
happening here," Wax, 30, told me in a telephone
interview from the capital of Khartoum in late November.
"It's a heavy responsibility. You can see I am
obsessed."
Wax's fretting over the lack of media attention to
what the United Nations has called "the worst
humanitarian crisis on the earth" carries with it a hint
of déjà vu. When 800,000 Rwandans were slaughtered
during a spasm of violence in 1994, the words "never
again" reverberated throughout the international
community. Journalists shouldered a share of the blame
for looking away from one of the world's worst
catastrophes.
As the 10th anniversary of the Rwandan genocide was
being observed in 2004, news managers once again were
under fire, this time for scant coverage of the
bloodletting in Darfur, where millions have faced
torture, starvation, rape and murder at the hands of
brutal Arab militias known as Janjaweed. Up to 70,000
have been killed.
"Even as the ink was drying on the latest round of
mea culpa [about Rwanda], another colossal disaster in
Africa was already going uncovered," Carroll Bogert,
associate director of Human Rights Watch, wrote in a
scathing commentary for the Los Angeles Times last
April. "So where are the journalists?"
A month later she was on the phone with a producer
from a major television network pleading for coverage of
the tragic events. "I asked, 'How do you want to look
back at this 10 years from now? What do you think you're
going to say to yourself about not sending a crew to
Darfur?' I was literally shouting at her," recalls
Bogert, who served a stint as acting foreign editor of
Newsweek.
Dick Rogers, the San Francisco Chronicle's readers'
representative, took a shot at his bosses in November
when he wrote a column scolding newsroom gatekeepers for
pushing the Sudan crisis to a back burner. "There was
the earnest declaration by so many of us that we were
not going to allow another Rwanda to slip by without
sitting up and taking notice," says Rogers, who turned
to the newspaper's archives to make his point. He
counted 36 page-one stories on the Laci Peterson murder
case and only three on Sudan--an echo of the era when
O.J. was everywhere and Rwanda was a blip. "It is a
matter of balance," he says. "Increased attention to
[Darfur] is justified."
A scan of Lexis-Nexis paints a disturbing picture.
Many of the stories on Sudan published in the nation's
newspapers tended to be 500 words or less, giving short
shrift to a complex conflict with powerful ethnic,
religious and economic factors. Many accounts lacked
historical context or perspective, often oversimplifying
the bloodshed in Darfur. And few of them appeared on the
front page.
Only a handful of newspapers have sent their own
correspondents to the scene. Foreign desks more often
turn to wire service briefs or an occasional piece by a
stringer.
Serious reporting on the subject largely has been
absent on the networks and on cable. Last year the three
network nightly newscasts aired a meager total of 26
minutes on the bloodshed, according to the Tyndall
Report, which monitors network news. ABC devoted just 18
minutes to Darfur, NBC five and CBS three. By contrast,
Martha Stewart's woes received 130 minutes, five times
as much.
Sudan took center stage on high-profile network news
programs like "Nightline" and "60 Minutes" only a few
times during the year. And while CNN's Christiane
Amanpour has done some reporting from the region, the
Darfur story never became a major player on cable.
When Time magazine put Sudan on the cover of its
October 4 issue, it marked the topic's only appearance
on the cover of the three newsweeklies last year.
Loren Jenkins, foreign editor for National Public
Radio, which has paid more attention to the issue than
most news organizations, agrees that much more needs to
be done. "The media often doesn't stick too long with
one story because there are so many," Jenkins says. "The
problem is, TV hasn't gone [to Sudan] much. It's been a
couple of newspapers and us."
Given the enormity of the human suffering in Darfur,
why hasn't the situation received major story treatment
from so many news organizations?
While the overall
media performance on Darfur has been disappointingly
weak, some news organizations have covered the story
with distinction. The Washington Post and New York Times
have emerged as leaders in persistent, on-the-ground
coverage, not just at the Chad border, where tens of
thousands of survivors have fled, but deep in vast
wastelands where the Janjaweed have left a trail of
scorched villages, rape and wanton killing.
In her highly detailed report "Dying in Darfur" in
the August 30 New Yorker, human rights activist Samantha
Power praised the Washington Post and New York Times for
regularly publicizing the crisis last year. Power won a
Pulitzer Prize in 2003 for her book about American
apathy toward genocide.
The work of a handful of journalists has been
particularly impressive, chief among them the Post's Wax
and New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof. He was
among the first to provide eyewitness accounts of the
horrors, coupling the human element with strong doses of
political commentary.
Jerry Fowler, staff director of the United States
Holocaust Memorial Museum's Committee on Conscience,
holds both in high esteem. He hails Kristof's passionate
columns as the kind of reporting that can drive world
opinion. "When the press covers a story like this, it
conveys a sense of importance to the public," says
Fowler. "It focuses people's attention on it."
In July, the Oregonian in Portland ran an editorial
speculating that Kristof's relentless "barking" might
have saved "tens of thousands, or even hundreds of
thousands" of Sudanese lives. "Until Kristof began
writing astoundingly graphic, intimate and moving
columns, the world's press, diplomats and politicians
did little more than glance at the genocide and mass
migrations that the Janjaweed Arab militias are
causing," the editorial says.
Fowler lauds Wax's highly humanized stories. "I hope
she gets a Pulitzer Prize for her work in Sudan," he
says. "The quality of her reportage and the power of it
has been remarkable." In November, she was named
"journalist of the month" by Women's eNews, a Web site
covering issues of concern to women, for her stories on
the plight of females in Africa, including rape
survivors in Sudan.
Knight Ridder's Sudarsan Raghavan and New York Times
reporter Somini Sengupta also have filed excellent
dispatches from Sudan.
While few newspapers have sent reporters to the
country, some have taken strong editorial stands on the
need for intervention in Darfur and have turned to
freelancers for coverage. Among them is the Boston
Globe, which has run several pieces from inside Darfur
by freelancer Raymond Thibodeaux, Wax's husband.
The few broadcast
highlights in Darfur coverage include two "60 Minutes"
segments. The show profiled the humanitarian crisis
twice in October after correspondent Scott Pelley and
producer Bill Owens took an interest in the topic.
Asked why the network had virtually ignored the story
on the nightly news, CBS e-mailed this statement,
attributed to Marcy McGinnis, senior vice president,
news coverage: "We are continuing to monitor the Sudan
story through our contacts at the United Nations, in
London and through stringers in Sudan... CBS News
recently aired a story on the 'CBS Evening News' setting
out the situation in Darfur, and will continue to make
editorial decisions as to airing updates as the story
evolves."
ABC's "Nightline" devoted two segments to Sudan in
July and November. At the opening of the November
program titled, "Never Again," Ted Koppel implored
viewers to "stay with us for a moment before you decide
to turn away to something lighter."
ABC spokeswoman Julie Summersgill cited the
"Nightline" segments when asked why the Darfur situation
had been largely invisible on the nightly news. "We've
come back at this a couple of different ways," she says.
Amanpour, CNN's chief international correspondent,
spent most of August broadcasting from the locale. A
network staffer says Amanpour "begged" her bosses to
send her because she felt high-profile coverage could
make a difference. CNN has done a better job than most
with keeping Sudan on its news budget.
Time put Sudan on the cover because "we saw a
humanitarian disaster unfolding without sufficient
public attention being paid to it," says World Editor
Romesh Ratnesar. "It's a story that has a lot of
interesting questions larger than those raised by the
conflict itself, such as how the United States defines
and responds to genocide."
Why hasn't U.S. News & World Report devoted a
cover story to the tragedy? "There is a lot going on in
the world today," says Terry Atlas, the magazine's
foreign editor. "Sudan's an interesting case, but it is
not the only tragedy in Africa."
A Newsweek spokesman said the magazine would not
comment on why it hasn't devoted a cover to the issue.
Sometimes major news developments have placed Darfur
on editors' radar screens. There was a flurry of
headlines last April when the United Nations dubbed it
the world's worst humanitarian crisis and again in
September when Secretary of State Colin Powell called
the carnage "genocide" during testimony before the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Some took notice
when the Holocaust Memorial Museum's Committee on
Conscience issued its first ever "genocide emergency"
alert in response to atrocities in Western Sudan.
But firsthand reporting from the scene has been all
too rare.
Journalists and
critics cite a number of factors for the scant coverage
of such a harrowing and significant story, including the
difficulty of gaining access to Darfur, budget
constraints, the war in Iraq and a presumed lack of
interest in Africa.
There's no doubt that lack of access is a major
obstacle. Early in 2004, the Sudanese government created
a news blackout; visas for journalists and aid workers
were nearly impossible to obtain. By April, permission
to enter was granted sparingly through a long, tedious
process. Once in country, journalists cooled their heels
in Khartoum waiting for permits to travel to Darfur, a
region about the size of Texas. If they were allowed in,
there were more delays waiting for documents from local
authorities in towns and villages.
"You need a bucketful of patience to overcome this,"
Knight Ridder's Raghavan said in an e-mail message just
after he had returned from a trip with African Union
soldiers on duty in Darfur. "Half the battle in covering
this story is getting to it."
Until September, the government assigned minders to
accompany correspondents. "Every village and town has
its own security and intelligence apparatus. Government
spies are in every camp, every village," says Raghavan,
who tried to protect sources by interviewing them out of
sight in a tent or in his car.
Journalists tell of traveling by donkey or camel or
in dilapidated vehicles that broke down as they tried to
reach remote territory, where some of the worst
atrocities are occurring. Inside Darfur, food and
potable water are hard to come by.
At times, even when correspondents reached the
elusive destination and filed their stories, competition
for the front page pushed Sudan coverage deep inside the
paper. Some journalists say that compassion fatigue may
have taken hold with editors weary of a complex armed
conflict that has been going on for decades and is
difficult to sort out.
International news budgets, already slashed in most
newsrooms, are more likely to be consumed by the war in
Iraq and, to a much lesser extent, developments in
Afghanistan (see Drop Cap, page 12). Arguably, events in
Sudan hold few foreign policy implications for the
United States.
Andrew Tyndall of the Tyndall Report sees the war in
Iraq as the major reason Darfur has drawn so little
attention from the networks. "The story from Iraq has
been so huge this year that it's crowded out all the
other international news," he said in December. "Almost
every part of the world has been undercovered on the
nightly news."
Time's Ratnesar also sees the pre-occupation with
Iraq as a major factor. "If this was unfolding five
years ago, many of the correspondents who are in Iraq
right now would be in Sudan, and a lot of media budgets
would not be quite as strained as they are now," he
says.
The San Francisco Chronicle considered sending a
staff writer to the region. But, says Managing Editor
Robert J. Rosenthal, "the idea succumbed to the
competing and costly demands of a heated presidential
campaign, two national political conventions and the
Iraqi war." Instead, in May, the paper ran a two-part
series by freelancer Benjamin Joffe-Walt, who also has
reported from the region for London's Sunday Telegraph.
"We're fortunate to have resources," says New York
Times Foreign Editor Susan Chira, whose paper has three
bureaus in Africa. "Some people have to make hard
choices."
Some critics say something other than tough
logistics, budget considerations and Iraq is at play.
At the annual dinner of the Overseas Press Club last
April, Human Rights Watch's Bogert talked to editors
about coverage of Darfur. After hearing various
explanations for why so many had stayed away, she
concluded, "With or without a war in Iraq, American
journalists are generally slower to cover mass death if
the victims are not white. The Rwandan genocide is a
case in point."
Bogert says that coverage has improved significantly
since her tirade against the media in the Los Angeles
Times last April, but "there's no question [the media]
are not doing as much as they could. Frankly, things are
not getting better in Darfur. The attacks continue," she
said in December.
Glenn Ruga, director of the Center for Balkan
Development, watched in the 1990s as mass killings
followed the breakup of Yugoslavia. The Balkans are in
Europe, he says, so the public and the press paid more
attention to rape, murder and ethnic cleansing in
Bosnia-Herzegovina and Kosovo. He describes the Sudan
situation as a vicious cycle. "Editors have to believe
the American people are going to take an interest in it.
But that's not going to happen until there's better
coverage. Clearly, the media must take the first step in
realizing this is an important story."
Time's Ratnesar cites the imbalance of coverage
between the mass killings in Bosnia in the early 1990s
and Rwanda, where hundreds of thousands more died. "The
fact is you're dealing with black people suffering, and
to some extent that, for whatever reason, tends to be
ignored by the mainstream media," the editor says.
Some say the trend toward more and more local
coverage is a factor. "Newspaper editors are trying to
figure out what to do to stop the bloodletting of
circulation," says Martha Malan, international editor of
the St. Paul Pioneer Press. "One of the theories in
vogue out there is local, local, local. That could be a
mistake." She adds, "With smaller papers, people in
charge don't have a particular connection" to stories
like Sudan. "Other things seem more immediate."
The San Francisco Chronicle's Rogers agrees. Darfur
"just doesn't push a button," he says. "If you applied
the same set of facts to a lot of different places in
the world, our reaction would be remarkably different.
Pick a place perhaps more familiar to us and it would be
an enormous story."
Martin Plaut, Africa editor of the BBC's World
Service News, doesn't face the same problems as his
American counterparts when it comes to engaging an
audience. He talks about historical ties, including the
fact that the United Kingdom was a colonizing power in
vast regions of Africa and continues to have extensive
trade with the Third World. "There's a general knowledge
among our public that others might not have," says
Plaut. The BBC follows the story "day in and day out. It
is our bread and butter. It is rare when we don't have
something on Sudan."
To get a sense of
the thinking behind their coverage decisions, AJR
interviewed editors at five local and regional papers
across the country.
Cleveland's Plain Dealer has not sent staffers to
Sudan. "Our feeling is in times of stressed resources
that our mission in life is to be a strong regional
newspaper," says Editor Douglas C. Clifton, who feels
there are "acceptable options" for Sudan coverage from
the wires. "The issues [like Sudan] that are intractable
and ongoing and appear never to have a resolution are
the ones that tend, in time, to get smaller and smaller
coverage," he adds. When news of the mass killings first
surfaced, the story "broke page one repeatedly and then
moved inside."
Tim Connolly, international editor for the Dallas
Morning News, views Iraq and Afghanistan as priorities
and sent reporters to both places during 2004. Connolly
says editors at the Morning News have talked about
sending someone to Sudan, "but we have not done it yet.
We still may in 2005. We do recognize it as a major
story."
He adds, "I am not sure it ever has been on the front
page; it probably should have been. But we normally try
to give priority to staff work for the front page."
At Raleigh's News & Observer, focusing on Iraq
rather than Sudan is a matter of foreign news touching
home. "North Carolina has had roughly a zillion fighting
men in and out of Iraq," says Steve Merelman, an
assistant state editor who has overseen foreign
reporting. "We are a local paper, and the Iraq war is
the story that directly touches a ton of people here. We
have decided we would put our eggs into that basket."
"We have spilled a fair amount of ink over Sudan,
including a few front page stories, but it has been all
wire copy," he adds.
For the Kansas City Star, the Sudan story does have
local angles. John Danforth, a former Missouri senator
and former ambassador to the United Nations, has played
a role in pursuing peace efforts in Sudan. A Republican
senator from neighboring Kansas, Sam Brownback, has been
outspoken about human rights abuses in Darfur. "That put
Sudan on our radar screen earlier than other newspapers
our size," says National Editor Darryl Levings. Rather
than send its own reporter to the scene, the Star, a
Knight Ridder paper, has published stories by Knight
Ridder's correspondent there.
Ann Hellmuth, associate managing editor for
national/foreign news at the Orlando Sentinel, has not
dispatched a correspondent to Sudan. She says the United
States, unlike her native Great Britain, doesn't have a
deep connection to Africa. "I don't think the African
continent, for a lot of American people, is a prime area
of concern," she says. "We're very interested in Latin
America, so we cover that for our readership. We don't
have large numbers of Sudanese living here."
Wire stories about Darfur regularly make the paper,
Hellmuth says, often on page three. She doesn't view
scarcity of media coverage on this topic as a deliberate
oversight due to racial or cultural differences. "People
get numb to this if you put it out there too often," she
says.
From May to
December, Knight Ridder's Raghavan made five trips to
Darfur, staying as long as a month at a time or until
his visa ran out. In an exchange of e-mails, the
correspondent described the challenges of documenting
genocide.
He interviews three to five survivors separately to
corroborate a single incident and to weed out
exaggerations. That level of confirmation, he says,
shatters the Sudanese government's denials that gang
rapes, bombings and murder have taken place. He turns to
aid workers, U.N. officials, rebel commanders and
government administrators to flesh out the narrative and
compare details.
"In some ways, covering this story requires basic
shoe-leather journalism, patiently knocking on door
after door, calling, calling and calling, until you
confirm what happened," Raghavan says. In November, when
local authorities repeatedly denied him permits to
travel to the northern Darfur town of Tawilla to report
on a rebel attack and a government aerial bombing, he
got there with the help of the African Union, which sent
a team to investigate.
Convincing the African Union took a barrage of
pestering phone calls, a visit to its headquarters and
hours of waiting. Raghavan, who has covered nine wars,
including those in Iraq and Afghanistan, says it was
worth it. The visit provided concrete evidence that the
Sudanese government was bombing its own civilians, which
it had publicly denied all year.
He lucked out by getting a benevolent government
minder who, during his first two trips to Darfur, coaxed
security officials into allowing the reporter to visit
prohibited areas, including the village of Kailek, scene
of one of the most horrific attacks of the conflict.
Villagers were held hostage, starved, raped and
executed. "This minder and countless other Darfuris are
heroes," says Raghavan, who first reported from Sudan in
1996.
"They risked their freedom, their lives, to assist
Western journalists and human rights groups. They bared
their souls and unveiled to the world the atrocities,
even as government spies watched. Many were later
interrogated, jailed and beaten. My notebooks are filled
with the voices of hundreds of such people."
The Post's Emily Wax, based in Nairobi, shares a
similar passion for Sudan and its people. Her August
trip into rebel-held territory pushed her to her
physical limits. In the end, with the Land Cruiser
hopelessly broken down, Wax walked for hours without
water or food through pounding desert sun on her way
back to the Chad border. Was it worth the price?
"It was totally worth every minute. We got to see the
devastation of the villages and meet the people who were
left behind and without aid, far from the eye of the
international community," Wax says. "The more attention
this story gets, the better. Most Americans don't know
where Sudan is."
Philip Bennett, the Post's assistant managing editor
for foreign news until he became managing editor in
January, compares Wax to the newspaper's Anthony Shadid,
who won a Pulitzer Prize last year for his compelling
accounts out of Iraq (see
"Voice of the People," June/July 2004). Her
commitment, he says, drives the paper's coverage and
propels the suffering of Darfur onto page one. He
believes her reporting has been instrumental in snagging
the attention of Washington powerbrokers.
"She has made a personal connection to the story and,
as a result, has been able to write with great empathy
and power about the human side of the conflict," Bennett
says. "This is a woman who two years ago was covering
schools" in Alexandria, Virginia.
During the first six weeks of last year, Wax was
stuck in Khartoum begging for a permit to get to Darfur.
She used the time to interview government officials who
claimed there were no problems, no suffering, no
violence in Western Sudan. Finally, she managed to slip
in with a French delegation. Wax contrasted the
government's blanket denials with the human misery she
witnessed at feeding stations. When the French left, she
attempted to stay, but was discovered by security agents
and escorted out.
During her trip with rebel fighters in August, Wax
lost 10 pounds and became ill from drinking
"chocolate-colored water," as she describes it.
"Temperatures got so high, the tires [on the Land
Cruiser] would burn," she says. "None of us had showered
for three weeks. We smelled like hell."
The soldiers were skinny, ragged and living hand to
mouth. One day, they bought a camel in a village market
to be butchered for food; another time they shot an
antelope after chasing it through the brush.
What motivated a big-city girl from Queens to sleep
on the ground night after night, go unwashed and live on
camel meat? "Everything about it, I love. I feel part of
something bigger than drinking Starbucks and hanging
around with my friends," Wax says. "I could be writing
24 hours a day and never feeling I'm doing enough. This
is an important part of who I am."
She laments that there are so few journalists on the
scene and that there is so much more to be written about
what appears to be the first genocide of the 21st
century. There is such vast and hostile territory to
cover, and "that's the most frustrating thing. We are
only seeing about 20 percent of it."
Journalists' eyewitness accounts from Darfur, she
hopes, will help hold the guilty accountable. "Keeping
the story alive," Wax says, "is so important."
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