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Bird Flu Blogging: Truth to Power

UPDATED: 01/09/06

Big media are not as big as we need them to be. A thousand reporters herd to the Michael Jackson trial, but not enough seek out places where really important news is breaking. The number of fulltime foreign correspondents working for so called "major networks" and newspapers has decreased in recent years [1] as has the amount of of money and resources mainstream media spends on foreign newsgathering. [2] Tom Fenton, the veteran foreign correspondent for The Baltimore Sun and CBS News just noted: "American news organizations [have] so depleted the ranks of hard news reporters over the years that they suddenly had to send out whatever lifestyle, fashion, and gossip types they could muster on a moment's notice." [3]

The mainstream reporter, as well, often stays in capitals and major cities. Bloggers, however, can specialize, look at nooks and crannies big media don't care or don't know about, or don't have any focus on.

Take Bird Flu: Those two words are getting major big media coverage and government attention.

Here is one item covered by the BBC of a few days ago.

Two teenagers in Turkey have died of bird flu, Turkish officials say, in the first cases outside South-East Asia.

CNN reported: "TURKISH BOY" dies from Bird Flu.

CBS: Also, now, as of today reported a third death in the same family.

MSNBC reports new cases in the Turkish capital.

The stories are treated as a medical item. Important--but nonpolitical. But there is one factor missing. Southeastern Turkey is a Kurdish region.

Why is this vital information?

Vladimir "van Wilgenburg" a young Dutch student and journalist blogs "From Holland to Kurdistan," independently studying news from the Kurdish region of Iraq and the Kurdish lands in Iran, Syria and Turkey. He reveals an important detail of the Bird Flu story: The first family hit by the flu and the deaths were ethnic Kurds, a people long persecuted by the Turkish government.

This is his report on "Turkish state not helping Kurds dying from flu (Saturday, January 07, 2006):

Due to extreme poverty, many [Kurds] have chosen to eat their sick animals rather than bury them in lime pits. Several residents said Turkish authorities had failed to properly inform the Kurdish-speaking community about what bird flu is and how it spreads to humans.

"Do you know what we can do against bird flu?" three students from a vocational medical school asked an AFP photographer on the mud-covered streets of the town, where donkeys compete for space with motorised vehicles.

"People are trying to learn what is going on from television, but most do not know Turkish fluently, they speak only Kurdish," said a high school student who only identified himself as Erhan. Some, meanwhile, appeared to have taken official warnings to heart. "I do not eat poultry. I stay away from poultry and I do not let passengers with live poultry in their hands into my car," 30-year-old taxi driver Hakan Capan said.

Others took a more fatalistic aproach to the threat. Nuri Akatar, a 35-year-old self-employed father of eight, said two of his children fell sick after his wife cut up sick poultry and cooked them, but underlined that he was sure it was not bird flu. "We went to the doctor who said we were not in danger. If something happens to a member of my family, there is nothing I can do, I will leave it up to Allah," he said.

Farm minister said bird flu had been detected in two wild ducks near the capital, Ankara, nearly 1,000km west of infected areas. "The disease has been identified in two wild ducks near a dam at Nallihan (about 100km west of Ankara)," Agriculture Minister Mehdi Eker told a televised news conference called to brief reporters on the situation in eastern Turkey [ Nort-Kurdistan].

The discovery suggests migratory birds may be spreading the disease across the large country, as experts had warned.

Kurdish family in vain

Wails echoed from the home of the devastated Kocyigit family, a simple concrete structure built high above this Kurdish town. Beneath snow-covered mountains nearby, an open grave awaited.

The family has lost three of its four children this week to bird flu or suspected bird flu: 14-year-old Mehmet Kocyigit and his sisters 15-year-old Fatma and 11-year-old Hulya. The fourth was hospitalized.

The doctor who treated the Kocyigit children said they most likely contracted the virus while playing with the heads of chickens who had died of bird flu. The children had reportedly tossed the chicken heads like balls inside their house.

As teams dressed in protective suits went home to home rounding up poultry for destruction, mourners trekked up the hill to the Kocyigit house. They took off their shoes before entering to sit with the children's grieving mother. The father stayed at the hospital with their last remaining child until late afternoon, when he came back to bury his third child in a week.

Hulya was buried later Friday in a simple, small grave in the corner of the cemetery beside her siblings. An imam wearing a mask and rubber gloves presided.

We're suffering," said an uncle of the children, Hasan Kocyigit.

The Kocyigits were a typical Dogubayazit family -- Kurdish, poor, dependent on and living closely with their livestock.

Bird flu does not easily infect humans, experts say. Eating cooked chicken is not considered risky. Health officials have said only those who had been in close contact with poultry were at risk. In Dogubayazit, that's nearly everyone. On the main streets of this town of 56,000 near the Iranian border, cars and trucks compete with carts bearing live animals and with flocks of sheep.

The people of Dogubayazit, 1,200 kilometers (750 miles) east of Ankara, are accustomed to living near their animals, and often it is the children who deal most with them. The people have seen their animals sicken before, but until now never thought it could put them in danger. "They knew the animals were sick, but who knew it would kill them?" Hasan Kocyigit said.

Language Barrier

Education is key to controlling the spread of the virus. That is hampered here by poverty and the inability of many in this largely Kurdish town -- especially women -- to speak Turkish.

Less than three months ago, Turkey tackled a large outbreak of the same deadly virus in a village in the west. No one there got sick, and the country was praised for its effective response.

Here in the east, things have been different. [Reference to the Kurdish area]

Trudging over the hilltops toward other houses of brick, concrete and stone, neighbor Ahmet Tastan, father of nine, translated from Kurdish to Turkish for his wife and other women worried they or their children would become sick.

They said they did not speak Turkish well enough to deal with doctors, and complained that the local hospital could not do anything for them, and that a larger one in Van where the Kocyigit children were treated was too far away.

....There is no trust among Kurds for the Turkish state and their policies

Or go to the Kurdish blog "Rasti":

"Enforced poverty of Turkish-occupied Kurdistan, as well as lack of services, have been part of the policies of the Turkish state used to wipe out the existence of the Kurdish people. Are these policies now beginning to bear fruit for the Turks? What they could not do with all their armies, they are permitting a tiny virus to do."

See also report in Kurdish media.

What a difference a blog or two makes: a political angle is brought in that probably contributed to the disease breakout in the first place. Where are the reporters for the networks, the big media? Why is this not the major press angle of the story?

Part of the propaganda of commercial media is that they keep us in touch with, as one slogan goes, "the news you need"; one network program even promises, "Give us 23 minutes and we'll give you the world;" The New York Times' most recent slogan is "everywhere you can't be." But the "world" and the "where" we tend to see in mainstream media is narrow, selective, episodic, torn from context. I illustrate this fact by asking my students to name more than two wars going on in the world today. Most can cite conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan. In my surveys, Vietnam, China, and "Africa" trail distantly behind. In fact, there are about 40 wars raging in various parts of the planet. Some objectively are huge news stories--1 million dead in the Sudan, 3.9 million killed in the Congo--but they receive scant coverage, while others are given saturation coverage. The Congo War is presently killing 38,000 people a month!

study found that during a 15 month period the ratio of reports on ABC news from Iraq versus the Congo was 4997 to 4!

Why the disparity in news coverage of between say one missing American teenager in Aruba and tens of thousands dead in the Congo? The reasons are complex, political and logistical, but the result is that the herd chases its own tails (and tales). If Iraq is the big story, then all the lenses go to Iraq, Congo be damned. Meanwhile the U.S. mainstream media diverts into issues that we would all agree are quite trivial in the scope of the economy or world peace--the Michael Jackson trial, for example.

The blowback for such inattention can be fatal. On August 24, 2001, I wrote an editorial printed on the MSNBC Web site about the then wall-to-wall coverage of the missing intern from Congressman Gary Condit's office. [*no longer online.] I pointed out that a Nielsen-estimated 24 million Americans had watched Connie Chung's interview with Condit. I contrasted this immensity of news coverage with the fact that, according to United Nations reports, up to 60 million female children are "missing," that is, presumed killed by parents who don't want daughters. Also, 585,000 young women die annually of complications from pregnancy and childbirth; more children died last year from malnutrition than died during the era of the black plague in medieval Europe. Finally, according to the Save the Children organization, "in Asia, one mother in 19 sees her child die in the first year of life."

I wondered if we couldn't find some way to escape from the spiral of silliness, triviality, and "human interest" sensation that had become the news business, or at least instill a sense of relativity.

A few weeks later, on September 11, 2001, we were all reminded that important events and issues occurring in distant lands can explode in our backyard if we ignore them. Who can cheerlead for such a system of selecting "what is news"? Who will mourn its passing? Again, blogs may not be the only answer, but the mainstream media are the problem, and the many good, conscientious, honest reporters trapped within the system know it.

Let's hope the bird flu is not the biggest blowback of all...

[1] Stephen Hess, "Media Mavens," Society, 33, no. 3 (1996): 70-8.

[2] Daniel Riffe and Ariamie Budianto, "The shrinking world of network news," International Communication Bulletin, 37, Spring, 2001: 18-35.

[3] Tom Fenton, Bad News: The Decline of Reporting, the Business of News, and the Danger to Us All. (NY: Regan, 2005): 63. 

References (1)

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  • Response
    David Perlmutter at PolicyByBlog points to blogger Vladimir van Wilgenberg who focuses on the Kurdish territories of the Middle East and brings a new dimension to the bird flu outbreak in Turkey: ... Due to extreme poverty, many [Kurds] have...

Reader Comments (58)

I agree with your view on the media being “one-sided.” The news channels focus on what they know will make them money. If one news channel had a story on about Iraq and another had a story on about the Congo, I (like a lot of people) would choose to watch the story about Iraq. The news companies know this when deciding what to air. The Michael Jackson story was aired for what seemed like eternity, but the news channels did this knowing that they would make tons of money off the advertisements they showed during the break. This just goes to show another example of how the world revolves around money.
January 24, 2006 | Unregistered Commentercurlyfries327
As horrible as it may sound, I believe that the average American citizen does not care about what goes on in other countries. Human beings are naturally terribly selfish. As far as the media goes, they have to compete with HBO and Showtime for viewers. They look to present the news as a form of entertainment. If they show the Michael Jackson trial or paste images of a pretty Caucasian girl who has gone missing in Aruba, they get viewers. If they talk about unrest in countries thousands of miles away, all the television sets in America turn to Survivor. I am not saying that all Americans are uninterested in what goes on in other parts of the world, but for the most part they are. Mainstream media should cover a broader range of topics but as long as entertainment is a factor, I am afraid we will be relegated to seeing endless celebrity trials and pretty missing teenagers on the news and in the newspapers.
January 24, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterKitKat86
Very informative Blog….
If millions of people are dieing on the other side of the planet I would and I bet the majority of are society would like to be informed about it way more then if Paris Hiltons dog was lost or if Michael Jackson’s back in trial. These celebrities personal life has no comparison to millions of lives. Today’s mainstream media are only focused on covering what they think are the popular stories, not the most important stories. The focus the media needs to change. Not just on topics that relate to America but to inform us what is going on in other parts of the world. All of these world issues are going to ketch up with the United States some day and it would be nice if we know about it before it does.
January 24, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterBOdge7
I do not understand why the media is not making a bigger deal about the bird flu. Even though it is not yet directly affecting the United States, the virus could very easily spread if no one does anything to try and stop and prevent it. AIDS did not originate in the United States, yet there are thousands of people infected with AIDS throughout our country today. The media needs to become less infatuated with movie stars and politics, and instead show more interest in the important things, such as life threatening viruses. If the impoverished country cannot afford to do research and stop this virus, than a more powerful country should step up and do something.
January 24, 2006 | Unregistered Commentereperin1
If it were only that easy to alter mainstream media coverage and its issues, then blogs would be a great substitute, but it could never be that way. Americans all over this country tune in to there local news channel, and pick up there local newspaper because it’s reliable and available. Unfortunately not every person has a computer, or internet access for that matter. Bogs could indeed help issues surface and help voices be heard and I am all for it, but everyone doesn’t always look or feel compelled to do so. Not to say that people don’t care about the war in Congo or the bird flu, it’s just that they don’t go out of there way to learn of these daunting issues, even though they should. Mainstream media may be to blame, but it’s also the population as a whole fault for what issues are covered and those that are not. If everyone stopped watching the evening news and picking up the local paper, then absolutely they would change what they were covering, but that would never happen.
January 24, 2006 | Unregistered Commenterstockdale
The average American citizen would rather watch CSI than Larry King live. Most of us, therefore, are ignorant about the genocide in Darfur, Sudan but probably remember what Jessica Simpson wore to the Golden Globe Awards (was she invited?). The only other issues we care about are probably our troops in Iraq, and other incidents directly affecting America. A show on a Hollywood celebrity is going to attract more viewers than something about the Bird flu, or the tsunami. Therefore, it would be unfair to blame everything on the media. After all, it’s a business too. It has to look after its interests.
The internet is a great resource to keep up with world affairs. If people would make an extra effort to “seek” rather than “receive” knowledge, they would be in a better position to dictate what the media offers.
January 24, 2006 | Unregistered Commenterolefin
Sex sells in this time and age and it is truly sad that what certain celebrities are wearing to awards' ceremonies is more important than the bird flu epidemic. This was a very insightful and informative blog that acquaints many with a topic that I completely forgot about: the ongoing culture clash between the Kurds and the Turks. The Turks' hate and abuse of the Kurds has been overlooked for too long now and this should not be tolerated. The idea of an inconspicuous genocide through the bird flu is alarming but is not far-fetched; a government so racist should not exist in this time and age but they have ruled this way unopposed for many years. The media should concentrate on exposing these terrible truths to the world rather than exposing us to America's worst singers.
January 24, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterGfect
I believe it has been a long understood rule of journalism that the big story makes the money. It is interesting to hear others views on the subject. You are defiantly right that media seeks out what it believes to be the big story that will get them the most attention, ie: money, rather than what might actually be the most important one. While all stories have their importance the over reporting of one can lead to a lack of attention to others which could be just as important. Your example of the Michael Jackson case vs the Congo are prime examples. Personally I could care less about the Michael Jackson case, where as the genocide in the Congo is a much more prevalent story, at least to me. I know several people who also feel this way. When did it become more important for the news media to entertain its viewers with the biggest story rather than report the facts? Maybe self educating bloggers are going to be the newly informed public replacing the media’s monopoly on knowledge.
January 24, 2006 | Unregistered Commentertrishthedish
I think this article brings up an excellent point on how the American media is not covering enough news in other parts of the world. The bird flu is something that everyone needs to be aware of, and it is sad to think that some of the information provided by the news in America is not completely accurate. I think the American media needs to focus more on the importance of the news, rather than the short amount of time they give it to you. It is very sad to know that the bird flu has killed several children in the Kurdish area of Turkey. It is awful to think that because of a language barrier and other reasons, that many of the Kurdish people were not even informed of this awful disease.
January 24, 2006 | Unregistered Commenterbkm9201
It is very interesting to see how many people blame the media on the lack of worldwide coverage that it presents to the American public. I have to agree with a few of the other respondents that it is the American public who is in fact responsible for what the media does and does not cover. Is it because we are uninterested in news stories about other countries? Partly, yes. As another respondent suggested we are a very selfish society. We care mainly about what happens in our social arena. Outside events, like those in the Congo and Turkey, are not viewed as having a direct impact on us, and therefore we see ourselves as not needing to be informed about them. However, these events do have an impact on us and it is important to show more interest in these areas.
But another important reason is because we don’t want to have to learn about others problems. Why after coming home from a long day at work would I want to watch a gory news documentary about the war in the Sudan when instead I can watch a Britney Spears interview, which promises to be "entertaining"? Also, we don’t want to have to put in the effort to become involved in these areas. As a workaholic society our time is limited and when we get home and sit in front of the TV, in general, we want to relax instead of getting all worked up about a news story. As long as the american people only show interest in "americanized news", the news will only cover those stories and will not make the effort to change because why risk losing all that revenue for a few measly news stories?
January 24, 2006 | Unregistered Commentercontender
I think that there is definitely a problem with the mainstream media reporting on things that won’t change, harm, or fix the world. BUT we all have to remember that CNN wants us to watch them at 8pm and not The OC or Desperate Housewives.. how are they going to compete with that.. but talking about Mischa Barton and Rachel Bilson or Teri Hatcher and Eva Longoria. We can't be mad at them for trying to stay alive is what I think.
January 24, 2006 | Unregistered Commentervogue
It is surprising that with all the things going on in the world good and bad, mostly all media you hear about is devastating news. The mass media’s fixation on violence, death, and sex can’t be good for our morals. Although it’s impossible to cover all the stories everyone wants to here the companies should at least try not reporting on the same thing over and over like the teenager in Aruba. I think that if a News company would try reporting on something other than what is seen everyday, on all the main headlines, they would get lots of viewers who are interested in hearing news that isn’t on every other channel. I do feel that there are probably many things we can be informed about by bloging, but I don’t think the bird flu is that big of a deal, more people probably died of West Nile disease in our own country.

January 24, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterCaptainC
It is alarming what American freedom can be like. The good the bad and the ugly I guess; you get all of the good people speaking their minds ( like in the featured blog), you get the “important” news when you view major networks that exclude 98% of the world, and you get September 11 the consequences of ignorance.
I was pretty shocked by some of the things said in this post. All of the wars that get no media coverage and the wrong information on a potentially life threatening virus prove the bias nature of television. In civics we learned that being a good American citizen meant being familiar with current events, and yet the misleading broadcast’s seem to be our only source of information. The blog in indeed a terrific way to let truth be heard but, be warned that with every good comes just as much bad and blogs could be easily abused.
January 24, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterGwen S.
Well, lets get a journalist's point of view on this. The first two things I ever learned in mass communication class were what makes news: timeleness and of course proximity. Now where this ties in with the current "bird flu" issues is the proximity. The American society has become so lazy that the only information we gather is what come from our daily news reporter... (Which none are positive.) Reporters today only tell the stories that readers can relate to, everyone in America thinks they can relate with any issue in Iraq or Afghanistan just because of 9/11. There’s your proximity. While readers are skimming through a newspaper sure they might stop to read the current Iraq issues to catch up to date, but that one tiny column dedicated to the hundreds of civil wars going on in Africa is brushed by without thought. It seems if we weren't affected in someway, then who cares? Bird Flu, oh yea that could come to America and kill us all...but oh those civil wars...ah not bothering the U.S. Even as a journalism major the media today still sickens me at times...I can't wait to show the world what real news is, if I can get a job entitling me to do these things! Maybe I'll just end up like the rest starting my own blog and trying to show the truth and horror beyond our blind eyes.
January 25, 2006 | Unregistered Commenterears1013
After reading this article and many of the responses I realize how unaware I am of the events that go on in the world. And to be honest I also don't care about what is going on around the world. I really only watch the news when something major happens such as 9/11, the tsunami, or hurricane Katrina. Many of the responses blame the media for not covering the bigger issues of the world. Instead the media reports on Brad and Jenn's break up and which celebrity is with who. The responses also say that Americans would rather watch a television show than the news. So these news stations are basically just trying to keep their viewers however they can which is by reporting on trivial things.
So I don't really blame the news stations. They have to make their living too. I would blame the people like me. The ones that don't really understand the importance of being aware of global happenings. The people that think news is entertainment. I think that it would be better to teach the younth of the America how important it is to know about the bird flu and matters such as that. Reading this blog makes me want to become more aware of world issues. Maybe when more Americans want real news the news stations will give it to us.
January 25, 2006 | Unregistered Commenterhunybuny5
It is quite obvious that the media’s main interest is news that is happening on American soil. Is that necessarily a bad thing? News happening in our country is very important. We live here; we need to know what is going on. However, I do believe the media should be reporting more substantial news rather than updates in the Michael Jackson trial everyday. Also, I agree it is very important for Americans to gain a greater perspective of the world around us, and more world coverage would probably be beneficial. Yet, the world is a big place and it could drive one crazy to try and learn about all the events going on in every part of the world. The media’s main problem is its concern with entertainment rather than giving Americans important news that could benefit their lives.
January 25, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterDaisy Mae
When covering media such as the “bird flu,” a reporter may have the tendencies to only report on the information that will be beneficial to his area of coverage. However, the blogger traveling from Holland to Southeast Turkey reports on a more in-depth issue. Discussing cultural backgrounds and differences between the ethnic Kurds and Turkish people elaborates on a different topic in relation to the “bird flu.” Are the Kurdish people of Turkey not being medically informed and/or being given the treatment that is required of the “bird flu?” The Dutch blogger may comment on the Kurds being of a different ethnic background than most Arab people in Turkey and how the Kurds' nomadic herding origin may cause their area to be more infiltrated with sick animals. One may see the rise in infections amongst the Kurdish people and the neglect in medical attention a result of the language barrier. Focusing on the more political controversy regarding the “bird flu” has recently been overlooked by mainstream news media around the world. Detailed and accurate coverage hopefully will be the new trend in news media versus the competitive news market today.
January 25, 2006 | Unregistered Commenterdiscofever06
The Avian Flu epidemic, especially the most recent outbreaks in Turkey, has been the topic of mild speculation for the past few months. Like most others, I was heartbroken to hear of the family with three children who died of the disease, and another who is in critical condition. In this aspect, the media has nailed appealing to observers’ emotions. As noted on the blog however, these children contracted the influenza virus by making recreational use of the detached heads of dead chickens. This brings up an excellent point….this poverty stricken family, like most other Kurdish families of the region and its surroundings are tremendously uneducated and unfortunate. I seriously doubt that any child in America would remove himself from an intense game of X-Box so that he may participate in an exhilarating game of “Chicken Head.” Fortunately, we as Americans do not suffer from this lack of resources, education, etc., and are therefore, far less likely to contract the disease. Perhaps this issue is not being addressed as much as some may deem appropriate, but it is not one that affects us directly, and devoting ample coverage to this matter would be in opposition with the cornerstone of media success, reporting the “here and now.”


January 25, 2006 | Unregistered Commentersportsman79
This presents an interesting point, showing where Americans stand with mainstream media, seemingly oblivious to how much we could do to help out with the bird flu. I have read numerous newspaper articles concerning this very topic, problems with the bird flu. Yet, after reading a couple blogs of information, I somehow feel more up to date about what is actually happening. Maybe it is because reporters have a tendency to write articles stuffed with insignificant words. The articles or news reports would be much more worthwhile if they got to the point and informed the entire public, from the Kurds to Americans to the Chinese, about what we, the uneducated people, can do to help stop the spread of the bird flu. Unfortunately, the Kurdish have a language barrier, which complicates their situation of having access to sufficient information. But we should not let that barrier stand in the way of helping out. We should care for them the way we would want people to care for us. They desperately need our help- even if it just be a good blog written in Kurdish. And yeah, it may not be affecting America directly right now. But knowledge is power and we need to be prepared for anything (maybe a bird flu epidemic) that might come our way. Even Bush is starting to take action about America and the bird flu.
January 25, 2006 | Unregistered Commentersoulsrvivr
I find the media coverage on the bird flu in America to be quite inadequate. I read the news paper almost daily and always first look at the international section to see what is going on in the rest of the world. It however doesn't surprise me anymore when I see Americans pick up the news paper and look to see what’s going on in Hollywood, how a new movie rated or most of all sports. Now I'm not saying that I don't find the sports section interesting but that is not the first thing I'm going to look at and definitely not the last before I trash the newspaper.
If people don't care about what is going on in other countries, they should at least know what is going on in their own. The American media is biased and shows its natives what they want to read or in other words, it hides what they don't want people to know. As this month marks Guantanamo Bay’s (camp delta) 4th anniversary, amnesty international releases further torture allegations but the news papers don't give an insight of what is really going on over there, and on top of all I could hardly find Americans who even care. There are just too many ignorant people out there. If you are reading this you're probably an exception!
January 25, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterEasyCheez2474

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