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Contributors
Daniel Pipes- Contributor
Daniel
Pipes is director of the Middle
East Forum, a member of the
presidentially-appointed board of the U.S.
Institute of Peace,
and a prize-winning columnist for the New York Sun and The
Jerusalem Post. His most recent book, Miniatures:
Views of Islamic and Middle Eastern Politics (Transaction
Publishers) appeared in late 2003. His website, DanielPipes.org,
the single most accessed source of information specifically
on
the Middle East and Islam, offers an archive and a chance
to sign-up to receive his new materials as they appear. [go
to Pipes index]
Al-Jazeera
in Al-Canada?
PC airways for pro-terrorist Islamic antisemitism
[Daniel Pipes and Charlotte West] 8/17/04
Al-Jazeera
is in the news again. Iraqi
authorities shut down the Qatari
television
station's Baghdad offices, citing the "violence
they are advocating, inciting hatred and problems and racial
tension." The U.S. Democratic party decided to take down
Al-Jazeera's banner from its national conference, so it would
not be televised around the globe.
But in Canada, in
the biggest telecommunications uproar in decades, Al-Jazeera
won approval for distribution over Canada's pristine,
politically correct, airwaves. This unlikely success in Canada
for an Islamist, antisemitic, pro-terrorist channel was achieved
by winning a special dispensation not available to the Fox News
Channel, the Italian state channel RAI, or a local Quebec City-based
radio station – a dispensation full of implications.
First, some background: The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications
Commission (CRTC) was formed in 1968 to decide who gets to broadcast
in Canada, and has always seen its mandate primarily to serve
as a bulwark against American programming, fearing that the giant
to the south would overwhelm homegrown talent. The main criterion
for a foreign station to win access to Canada was its not competing
with companies already in the Canadian marketplace, plus the
existence of consumer demand for their product.
Then, in 1986-87,
restricting "abusive comment" became
a CRTC responsibility, after Canada's "anti-hate
laws" amended
the Criminal
Code, the Broadcasting Act, and other human rights
statutes. Its only
leverage however, was to grant or revoke 5-to-7-year
licenses, though in instances, it can revoke a license sooner.
The CRTC lacks funds to monitor stations on its own, so it responds
to complaints, investigates them, and if it finds them warranted,
revokes licenses.
For example, earlier
in July, the CRTC revoked Quebec radio station CHOI's license,
on the "abusive comment" grounds.
CHOI is a legitimate outlet but displays a politically incorrect
agenda, regularly offending gays, women, and others. CHOI ignored
CRTC warnings to change its ways and got shut down. Note that
the CRTC made no attempt to sift the wheat from the chaff, block
out a few shows, or fire a few announcers. It revoked the CHOI
license, plain and simple.
One would similarly
expect Al-Jazeera, also a legitimate outlet but infamous for
its "abusive comments", to be denied
a license. But in this case the CRTC
found a creative way to
circumvent its own criteria. It invited the potential distributors
of Al-Jazeera to monitor for compliance, delete programs as necessary,
and keep the tapes for review. The CRTC effectively invited distributors
to edit materials that contravene Canada's anti-hate laws, thereby
minimizing complaints and ensuring that Al-Jazeera stays on the
air.
This decision was
made despite there being no question that Al-Jazeera broadcasts
objectionable material. Secretary of State
Colin Powell notes that Al-Jazeera "takes every opportunity
to slant the news and present it in the most outrageous way possible" deliberately "for
the purpose of inflaming the world and appealing to the basest
instincts." CRTC chairman Charles Dalfen stated that some
of the material reviewed at commission hearings held Jews up
to "hatred and contempt on the basis of religion." Examples
include:
- An interview
with a mufti who said "there can be no peace
with the Jews because they suck and use the blood of Arabs
on the holiday [sic] of Passover and Purim."
- An e-mail
read on the Al-Jazeera program The Opposite Direction that "[Jews
are] the descendants of apes and pigs [who] will not be
deterred unless there is a true Holocaust that will
exterminate all of them at once."
- An interview
with KKK leader David Duke; Duke is not allowed on any station
now available in Canada.
Montreal MP Jacques
Saada concludes that "Al-Jazeera is
a station which has a history of allowing the distribution of
materials that are contrary to our Canadian laws and Charter." Toronto
MP Art Eggleton concurs: "The hatred spoken over the airwaves
by Al-Jazeera could well contravene Canada's hate laws." Nor
is this only a theoretical worry, as Montreal and Toronto both
witnessed a spike in crimes by Middle Eastern immigrants against
Jews.
(The French broadcasting
authority, CSA, banned
Hizbullah's Al-Manar satellite television from broadcasting in France on
July 28, due to its "anti-Semitic content." It had
been broadcasting since September 2002, during which time hate
crimes against Jews have doubled in France, and almost half of
French Jews now say they are thinking of leaving France.)
The unprecedented
concession to broadcast Al-Jazeera has raised eyebrows among
those waiting for Fox News in Canada. They charge
the CRTC with bias, given how the Fox applications have repeatedly
been denied for four years – though it has a legitimate
viewpoint and certainly does not have a problem with "abusive
comments." CRTC's claim that Fox fails its non-competition
criteria is dubious, given Fox's conservative-leaning viewpoint,
one not found at its principal competitors, the Canadian Broadcast
Corporation or CNN.
Then there is the question of market share, as established by
the RAI precedent. This Italian state-owned channel sought to
enter the Canadian market and a petition to the CRTC of 100,000
names supported the application, but it was turned down on the
grounds that another station, Telelatino, already served the
469,485 Italian-speaking Canadians. If regulations were applied
consistently, the existence of other Arabic-language channels
in Canada (ART America, Ana Canada, Arab TV Network, ART movies)
that serve the 199,940 Arabic-speaking Canadians would be reason
for Al-Jazeera's rejection. (And the same day Al-Jazeera was
accepted, LBC, another Arabic-language station, was rejected.)
Despite these many
concessions to Al-Jazeera, its advocates have expressed discontent,
finding its treatment not special
enough. The Canadian office of the Council on American-Islamic
Relations told its followers to "CONTACT the CRTC. Ask them
to revoke their restrictions." Would-be distributors complain
that cleaning up Al-Jazeera is too daunting. "We would have
to have somebody 24 hours a day, seven days a week, who spoke
Arabic, who understands the Canadian broadcasting standards,
and then would be able to black out that particular piece of
programming," bellyaches Peter Bissonette, president of
Shaw Communications.
That the CRTC has applied new and unique rules to Al-Jazeera
alone fits into a wider pattern of concessions made to Islamists
throughout the West. A municipal swimming pool in France implements
women-only hours. A British judge agrees to prohibit Jews and
Hindus from serving on the jury to try a Muslim. The U.S. State
Department appoints a Muslim-only advisory board. The government
of Argentina donates land to build a mosque.
Muslims are entitled to equal rights; they are not entitled
to special rights. Western governments need to make this point
often, consistently, and with emphasis. CRO
This piece
first appeared in the New York Sun
copyright
2004 Daniel Pipes
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