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Iraqi Reporters Run Risks to Cover
Women's Angle
By Dominique Soguel
November 1, 2007 – (WOMENSENEWS) Six women
from McClatchy's Baghdad bureau took on the high-risk assignment
of covering the war. Sometimes working in secrecy, they reported
the sweeping changes facing their homeland and worked to put women's
stories on the record.
Iraqi female journalists have one major advantage
over their male and foreign counterparts when it comes to covering
women's stories: access.
As women, they can enter homes and break the silence
on taboo subjects such as rape and domestic violence. As journalists,
they can publicize private pains of women in the hope of influencing
policymakers.
"Covering women is really hard and dangerous
at the same time," says Huda Ahmed, one of six Iraqi women
from the McClatchy Company's Baghdad news bureau to receive the
International Women's Media Foundation's Courage in Journalism Award
on Oct. 23. "We call to make an appointment and suddenly a
male relative tells them not to talk to us."
Through their courageous reporting, the award recipients
have not only covered the war, they have also uncovered the marginalization
of women in parliamentary decision-making, addressed women's strategies
to survive sectarian violence and followed the story beyond the
suicide bomb.
Ahmed says she has dropped stories when the risk
to her source was too great. She often changed the names of female
subjects to protect them from a potential backlash from male relatives
or sectarian groups that target individuals working with the foreign
media.
In an environment where everyone is your potential
enemy the challenge, Ahmed says, is to build trust. "You have
to go where they live and meet them eye to eye. They have to see
you and see that you are sincere in listening to them and telling
the truth."
Debate on Women's Rights
The current constitutional debate on women's rights
and the role of religion in determining family law are issues that
Ahmed and her colleagues have reported.
Ahmed says that women across classes and different
sects don't understand if Iraq's new constitution has hurt or advanced
women's rights.
"Women don't know if it will allow them to
progress or give a platform for Islamist extremists to push them
back," Ahmed says.
The ambiguity comes from Article 41 in Iraq's interim
constitution, which allows citizens to marry, divorce, inherit and
settle personal disputes according to their religious sect. Some
worry that opens the door to restrictive interpretations of Islamic
law, Sharia, and could fuel sectarian attacks on women. Politicians,
Ahmed adds, are reluctant to face the issue head on.
"The government is so concerned with providing
security and services, that when the question of women's rights
comes up in parliament they postpone it at the first disagreement."
As these debates unfold, sectarian violence continues
to spread, straining mixed marriages and polarizing mixed neighborhoods.
According to the United Nations, 4.5 million Iraqis have fled the
country or been displaced inside Iraq.
Ban Adil Sarhan, another of the six to receive
the Courage in Journalism Award, is the first woman to have worked
at McClatchy's Baghdad bureau.
In her year there, from 2003 to 2004, Sarhan found
herself crying at the site of suicide bombs and attending funerals.
Then she reached out to widows to share their stories with the world.
"It is hard to see 300 bodies burnt to the bone," she
says. "But what happened to the beloved of the person that
died five minutes before?"
Insurgents shot and killed Sarhan's husband, daughter
and mother-in-law in 2004. They had found out that she worked as
an interpreter for the foreign media. After continued threats on
her life, she escaped Baghdad and resettled in Oklahoma with her
son.
News Agency Focused on War
The McClatchy Company, based in Sacramento, Calif.,
purchased Knight Ridder in 2006 and runs 31 U.S. newspapers. The
company was one of the few whose coverage of the run-up to the 2003
invasion questioned the Bush administration's evidence for war.
Turnover at the Baghdad bureau has been very high
because of Iraq's instability.
In 2006, 32 journalists and 15 news support staff
were killed on duty in Iraq, according to the New York-based Committee
to Protect Journalists. In the first half of 2007, 28 journalists
and four news support staff died; 162 news workers lost their lives
since the start of the war.
Baghdad bureau chief Leila Fadel, an Arab American
woman who runs the Baghdad bureau, tries to keep a balance of Sunnis
and Shias, representing both sides of the sectarian conflict, on
staff. The bureau compiles a daily round up of violence based on
reports from Baghdad police, the Ministry of Information and stringers
based in Erbil and Basra.
In McClatchy's staff of five reporters, two are
women. Fadel says she makes a special effort to keep women such
as Ahmed and Sarhan on board.
"By having women in our bureau we can cover
half the population that men can't cover," she told Women's
eNews in a phone interview.
Only One Left in Baghdad
Five of the McClatchy journalists honored with
the Courage in Journalism Award--Ahmed, Sarhan, Shatha al Awsy,
Zaineb Obeid and Alaa Majeed--have had to leave Iraq. Only one award
recipient continues to work in Baghdad. Like most of her colleagues,
she began working as a translator and then adopted a pseudonym to
byline her articles.
Unbeknownst to family and friends back in Baghdad,
she traveled to the award ceremonies at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel
in New York. For her safety, the Washington-based International
Women's Media Foundation asked the press not to publish her picture.
"As a woman, as long as I am not identified
as a reporter," she told Women's eNews, "I am safer on
the streets of Baghdad than is any man."
Secretly, she breaks all the glass ceilings. Not
only is she the breadwinner in her family, she successfully juggles
motherhood with journalism in the most dangerous war zone today.
Her father would have a heart attack, she joked,
if he found out that she was a journalist.
Only her children are in the know. Every morning
she kisses them goodbye knowing that it could be the last time.
She takes endless precautions to keep her identity
and work a secret. Finding safety in deception, she switches dress,
drivers and accents between destinations. But as Iraqi men take
on fake uniforms and raise fake checkpoints on the main road, it
has become impossible for her to know who to trust.
"A lot of people would say I have betrayed
my family because I am putting them and myself at risk," she
says. "But if it is not done, if I stay silent, it is not just
my family that would be at risk. It is everyone's family."
From:http://www.womensenews.org/article.cfm?aid=3369
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