31 Oct 2002
By Ruth Gidley
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North Korean cooperative farm workers
transplant rice in Kilju county, North Hamgyong
province. File photo | Website:
http://www.forgottencrises.dk COPENHAGEN,
Oct 31 (AlertNet) - Humanitarian specialists and journalists
attending a meeting in Denmark last week challenged the widely-held
view that media attention is the strongest factor in determining
levels of aid, while technology is making more information available
faster.
Representatives of humanitarian agencies, often critical of
the mainstream news agenda for ignoring crises, and delegates from
media organisations attended a conference in Copenhagen on
"Forgotten Humanitarian Crises" organised by the Danish Refugee
Council.
Nik Gowing, a BBC presenter who has written on the role of
the media in humanitarian emergencies, said: "It is a
self-perpetuating myth that increasingly there is less media
coverage of humanitarian emergencies.
"It's a mindset and a paradigm that doesn't represent
reality."
Gowing cautioned against the temptation to regard the media
as a monolith, adding: "It's wrong to assume that the ten o'clock
news is all of it."
He reminded delegates that there were websites devoted to
providing information for humanitarian actors. "IRIN, AlertNet,
ReliefWeb -- it's out there."
He said: "The revolution in information technology and
low-cost, lightweight means of recording and transmitting means more
reporting than ever from even the most remote, tense and dangerous
theatres of conflict and natural disaster."
He said that the new spectrum of "information doers" included
people who would be classified as advocates rather than journalists.
"It is a myth that
there is less coverage of emergencies"
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According to Gowing, the tension between reality and
real-time reporting could lead to less balanced, less accurate
reporting.
"Those of us lucky enough to work for a massive,
well-resourced news machine like the BBC, which seeks at all times
to report accurately, objectively and impartially by double-checking
and not rushing to judgement, face a major challenge as other
players rush to report, rather than check.
"In real time, even the sources can be wrong."
He continued: "It's a question of how it's being filtered.
You have to know what it means. There's a gap between the collection
(of information) and how it's delivered.
"It's up to us to filter that in a way you trust.
"How do you distinguish the news from the rumours, because
the rumours can steal the high ground more easily than the actual
facts?"
Despite the good reputation of the BBC, not everyone was
prepared to trust its filters.
Sorious Samura, a Sierra Leonean journalist, said it was
difficult to persuade international news organisations to transmit
"Cry Freetown", his graphic exclusive film coverage of brutalities
in his home country in 1998.
"Why are we scared of reality?" he asked.
Gorm Rye Olsen, one of three researchers who examined what
determined the level of emergency assistance in crises, said media
coverage was not the most important factor.
Olsen, from the Centre for Development Research in
Copenhagen, carried out the task with Nils Carstensen, information
officer with Dan-Church-Aid, and Kristian Høyen of the Danish
Refugee Council.
They found that media coverage of floods in Mozambique in
late 1999 had led to greater assistance than floods in the Indian
state of Orissa the same year, even though the number of people
affected was greater in the Indian case.
"In real time,
even the sources can be wrong"
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Olsen said there was a common perception that media attention
could persuade governments to respond to crises in poorer countries.
His group's research found evidence that media coverage had
increased assistance in some instances, such as Western intervention
in Iraqi Kurdistan in the spring of 1991 and humanitarian
intervention in Somalia in December 1992, but it was more common for
governments to use the media to communicate their message to the
public.
"According to 'aid motivation literature'," the researchers
found, "the allocation of development aid from big donors... tends
to be motivated by donor interests, whereas small and middle-size
donors, like the Scandinavian countries, are mainly motivated by the
needs of the recipients."
This was confirmed by a comparison of aid to North Korea and
Angola and Sudan, when North Korea continued to receive large
amounts of aid, despite a dearth of media access or coverage.
The researchers examined the impact of media attention and
donor security interests, and a third hypothesis of the significance
of what they labelled "stakeholder commitment", by which they meant
the existence of specialised humanitarian agencies, donor
administrations, early warning systems and rapid reaction units,
codes of conduct, specialised information structures and
coordinating networks.
In their analysis, this was one of the most important factors
in attracting and maintaining humanitarian assistance.
"The widespread conviction in the aid community that the
Kosovo crisis 'stole' or diverted emergency assistance from Africa
to Europe (the Balkans) is difficult to substantiate," they said.
"The allocation of
aid from big donors tends to be motivated by donor
interests"
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They came to this conclusion after finding that, although
Kosovo received a great deal of media attention and humanitarian
assistance, Angola and Sudan also received ongoing assistance,
despite not featuring in the mainstream media.
This was attributed to pressure from a well-informed aid
community in the African countries, lobbying for their needs.
The researchers said that in the absence of donor security
interests, the presence and strength of humanitarian stakeholders in
the region, and the persistence of the international press, could
determine the volume of emergency aid allocations.
"In relation to the allocation of emergency aid, media
attention is no more crucial than donor interests are, and certainly
not as important as the so-called CNN effect would have it. Rather,
the case seems to be that the media play a crucial role in
influencing decision-makers only when there are no vital security
issues at stake," the report said.

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