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Australia Rejects Israeli Ordered Media Censorship On Al-Manar
16 December 2010 By Franklin Lamb
Australia's Parliament and main stream media may
not differ all that much from other western countries
when it comes to chronic groveling to its Zionist
lobby. But like citizens in many countries,
Australians sometimes courageously exhibit admirable
independence and respect for their society's own
values.
On December 10, 2010, whether by design or
coincidence, International Human Rights Day,
Australia's Communication and Media Authority (ACMA )
released its much anticipated decision on whether to
ban Lebanon's Al Manar TV channel from being broadcast
down under via the Indonesian PT Indosat satellite (
Palapa D) that was launched on 12/27/09. As in the US,
which does ban Al Manar, the popular stations
programming would, even if banned, still be available
via internet live streaming.
"The Beacon"
Al Manar (" the Beacon"), affiliated with the Lebanese
political party, social service organization and
resistance movement Hezbollah, has been the target of
an intensive Israel ordered international media
assault for several years. Silvan Shalom, former
Israeli Foreign Minister, at a 2004 Herzliya
Convention, outlined his governments policy
succinctly: "The Israeli Foreign Ministry intends to
work actively to have Al Manar banned in other
countries around the globe. It is Israel's intention
to bring the seriousness of Al-Manar's broadcasts to
the attention of the international community and to
convince them to prevent Al-Manar from operating in as
many countries as possible."
The Arabic-language station, started in 1991, has
twice been banned in Australia, but was cleared by
ACMA (Australia's Communication and Media Authority)
in 2009 and now again in 2010.
How ACMA arrived at its decision
To its credit, Australia's media watchdog agency took
its work seriously and more than once resisted being
railroaded by `Israel first' groups. ACMA's mandate
was to address community concerns by aiming to prevent
the broadcast of programs that directly attempt to
recruit people, or solicit funds, for listed terrorist
organizations.
Specifically ACMA wanted to know if Al Manar, via its
programming, "directly recruited persons to join, or
participate in, the activities of a listed terrorist
organization; or solicited for or assisted in the
collection or provision of funds for a listed
terrorist organization."
To determine this, ACMA translated, watched and
carefully analyzed popular Al Manar program including
the following:
Date of broadcast Program Description
26 December 2009 8th day of Ashura Speech given by the
Secretary-General of Hezbollah, Sayyid Hassan
Nasrallah.
25 December 2009 7th day of Ashura Speech given by the
Secretary-General of Hezbollah, Sayyid Hassan
Nasrallah.
15 December 2009 Advertisement Donation for al-Emdad
charity.
15 December 2009 Interstitial Our Dignity is
Attributed to Martyrdom. Message to resistance
fighters.
15 December 2009 Interstitial Martyr memorial of Jihad
Malek Hammoud.
1 December 2009 Manifesto speech We Want Lebanon
Strong and United. Speech given by the
Secretary-General of Hezbollah, Sayyid Hassan
Nasrallah.
17 November 2009 Drama program Syrian-produced drama
series.
15 November 2009 Current affairs Youth. Presenter
discusses social networking sites with viewers.
15 November 2009 Current affairs Ma'a Al Mushahideen
(With the Viewer). Presenter discusses the war in
Yemen with viewers.
5 March 2009 Children's program What is it? Children
explaining their illustrations.
28 February 2009 Current affairs With the Event.
Presenter discusses Islamic and Christian Holy sites
with guest.
In issuing its findings of fact and conclusions of law
ACMA found that Al Manar did not violate Australian
law, and was free to broadcast in the country, ACMA
did however, issue a caveat regarding two of the above
listed programs, With the Event and With the Viewer.
A majority of the ACMA board felt With the Viewers, on
15 November 2009, was in breach of clause 1.2 of the
ACMA codes, and felt the program was not presented
fairly. The ACMA also found the broadcast of the
current affairs program, With the Event, on 28
February 2009, was in breach of clause 1.3 of the
codes, as the program might gratuitously vilify a
group on the basis of ethnicity and religion.
However, ACMA still issued a clean bill of health to
Al Manar.
A minority on the ACMA board felt that Al Manar should
not be held responsible for any code breaches with
these two particular episodes because the ACMA survey
of Al Manar programming makes clear that Al Manar
presenters and program moderators routinely introduce
programs objectively and try to moderate objectionable
demeanor from their guests or viewers. Moreover, they
pointed out that the With the Viewers and With the
Event programs feature live audience participation.
With the Viewers, one of the most popular shows in the
Middle East, features people calling in to express
their opinions on certain issues and current events.
During With the Viewers, the presenter will cut calls
that cross the ethical, religious, lines.
Defamation is not allowed no matter who or what views
are being discussed. For example, Palestinian refugees
might call in to talk about their sufferings from the
occupation and sometimes passions rise. All in all,
With the Viewers and With the Event are thought by
some ACMA analysts to be rather tame compared to
certain American and Israeli programs where racist
slurs and ethnic incitements are more common.
In fact, Al Manar has sometimes been criticized for
being `too tame' in its wish to be a family oriented
station while avoiding controversy. This observer was
disappointed with Al Manar when on August 13, 2010 it
pulled the widely praised and award winning series,
"The Christ" (Al-sayid al-masih) by famed Iranian
Director Nader Talebzadeh because of some murmurs of
criticism from certain Christian politicians. The
story line shows the Muslim point of view of Jesus and
brilliantly presents his life as a prophet. Al Manar
said it took the action "in respect of some
sensitivities and to avoid any attempt for negative
exploitation." However, they said, the series
"reflects, with full honor and glorification, of
Jesus' life, picture, role, pain and sacrifices."
What the ACMA decision means beyond Al Manar's clean
bill of health
Sometimes the symbolism of an event exceeds the
significance of the specific act itself. Few freedom
of speech and objective media and journalism advocates
are not praising Australia's stance in rejecting
politically motivated assaults on broadcasting which
is essentially all that the ACMA-Al Manar case
represented.
In response, those crusading against Al Manar have
issued their boiler plate objections including
implying Australian anti-Semitism, ACMA incompetence
and growing and dangerous Muslim influence.
Mark Leibler, AIJAC `s national chairman, said his
organization was " outraged that ACMA ignored evidence
that ads of a particular charity, al-Emdad were shown
on Al Manar. Claiming this was a breach of Australia's
anti-terrorism standards".
The council's executive director, Colin Rubenstein,
urged ACMA, despite its findings, to ban the TV
station " because it is associated with Hezbollah,
which itself is Terrorist listed by the federal
government. Rubenstein added "Al-Manar's raison d'etre
is to radicalize Muslims around the world, including
in Australia, to support Hezbollah's terrorist methods
and goals. AIJAC believes any media organization owned
and/or operated by any banned terrorist organization
should also be banned in Australia."
Outside College Hall on the campus of the American
University of Beirut, some students were discussing
the ACMA decision. One young man from Egypt explained,
"All Hezbollah has ever asked from those who may be
wary of the Party for some reason or another is to
keep an open mind. Sit with us, dialogue with us, give
us a fair hearing on the facts as you see them. This
is all Hezbollah or any party has the right to ask.
Australia, to its great credit did just that. I have
never met an Australian but I think they must be very
fair minded people."
One political consequence of ACMA ruling may be to
kill H.R. 2278, Florida Congressman Gus Bilirakas'
"Terror TV" bill that AIPAC told him would target Al
Manar and Hamas' TV station Al Aqsa, but it turns out
would affect more than 64 Arab and Muslim satellite
channels in 24 countries. The bill is currently in
John Kerry's Senate Foreign Relations Committee and
will likely never get out. " It's a goofy bill, we
don't need the problems it would cause especially
given the near universal condemnation it received from
every government in the Middle East", one of Kerry's
aides explained.
The Grinch
Meanwhile, Australian's Zionist lobby received a
triple painful dose of disappointment from the Grinch
who stole Hankakah this year when in addition to the
ACMA shock, Australian Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd
announced that his government would be tripling its
contributions to, one of AIJAC's long pursued targets
for dismantlement, the United Nations Relief and Works
Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA)
by providing AUD 18 million over the coming three
years.
As if that were not enough holiday season punishment,
AIJAC's Reubenstein ruminated about the fact that
Secret cables from the US embassy in Canberra,
provided exclusively to the Sydney Morning Herald by
fellow Australian Julian Assange, founder of WikiLeaks,
reveal that some Australian officials do not share the
US-Israel assessment that Iran is a "rogue state".
Australian intelligence agencies, much like the CIA
and other western intelligence, actually see Iran's
nuclear program as a strategy to deter foreign
attacks, implying a possible positive aspect to Iran's
work in the nuclear field.
AIJAC, while not giving up trying to close Al Manar in
Australia, is now planning a geographical shift of its
crusade, for the time being. The executive director of
the Executive Council of Australian Jewry, Peter
Wertheim, on 12/11/10 called on Canberra to demand
that the Indonesian government immediately cancel the
PT Indosat satellite with Al Manar "and finally grasp
the true nature of the station, particularly the
danger al-Manar poses vis-a-vis the radicalization of
Indonesian Muslims".
What Israel and its international lobby appear
concerned with, and not without some basis, given the
potential penumbral effects of ACMA's ruling and what
it means for the rest of the US-Israel politically
inspired terrorism lists.
The American justice system is obviously not perfect.
But to quote Julian Assange's on his release from
Wandsworth's Victorian era prison on 12/16/10 with
respect to Britain, "If justice is not always an
outcome, at least it is not dead yet." In addition to
what ACMA's administrative agency and quasi judicial
findings did for broadcasting rights and free
journalism, lawyers in America are hoping to do for
many individuals unjustly targeted with various
T-listings. There are many egregious cases that have
never been judicially reviewed since the Plaintiffs
are abroad. Some are extreme cases including one where
children are T listed from traveling to the US to
visit loved ones, as is the case with one former
Minister in Lebanon's government and a leading
political figure who has never been charged with
terrorism and is not affiliated with Hezbollah or any
other US T listed group.
Given the chance that American justice is not dead
yet, it is hoped that, judicial review, on a case by
case basis will shed light on the disgrace that is the
US Treasury Department's over broad and likely to be
found illegal corralling of citizens who might object
to aspects of American foreign policy in the Middle
East. If they receive a fair hearing on the facts, and
unless a solid case to the contrary is proved and not
merely hinted at, many are expected to be immediately
de-listed.
If American courts apply the same fair standards
exhibited by ACMA in Australia, in addition to the
hapless fish netted individuals, Al Manar TV Channel,
Nour Radio Station, and Jihad al Binna, and Waad
Construction companies, among others, could be in a
short line to be T de-listed. And none too soon.
©
EsinIslam.Com
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