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- PRESS, Page 106Who Cares About Foreigners?In death and disaster, where people live countsBy William A. Henry III
-
-
- One of the first axioms American reporters learn is that a
- fender bender on Main Street is bigger news than a train wreck in
- Pakistan. Just as Tip O'Neill crystallized electoral wisdom in his
- dictum "All politics is local," many editors seem to have concluded
- that all journalism should be local too. Reportage from distant
- places tends to be limited to the melodramatic and gauged by
- personal relevance: either the it-could-have-been-me human-interest
- factor or the larger-implications factor of how, although the news
- consumer was untouched by a particular event, similar ones in the
- future might have greater impact.
-
- U.S. press coverage of two recent plane crashes provides a
- striking example of this phenomenon. Each accident had larger
- implications for the general safety of air travel. After a USAir
- jet plunged into New York City's East River on a takeoff from
- LaGuardia Airport with a highly inexperienced crew at the controls,
- both pilot and co-pilot failed to make themselves available in
- timely fashion for drug and alcohol tests. When a French UTA jet
- exploded in midair after taking off from the African nation of
- Chad, investigators found evidence of a terrorist bomb, allegedly
- linked to Middle East events.
-
- If the crashes were comparable as cautionary tales, they
- differed sharply in severity. The LaGuardia accident resulted in
- two deaths and seven hospital admissions. The Chad mishap killed
- all 171 people on board. Yet in the week following the two crashes,
- the Washington Post ran an identical number of stories, five, about
- each. The Los Angeles Times published almost twice as many stories
- about the New York City crash (ten) as the one in Chad (six). In
- the New York Times, the LaGuardia crash rated twelve stories, the
- Chad disaster six. The networks reacted similarly: ABC's Nightline,
- for example, aired three cut-in reports and, later, a full show
- about the LaGuardia accident but nothing about the Chad crash.
- (TIME ran three paragraphs on the French airliner and two on the
- American plane.)
-
- To be fair, there were logistical reasons for the disparity.
- The USAir accident took place only a taxi ride away from the
- headquarters of the three networks and many other news
- organizations -- indeed, a CBS News producer was in the plane when
- it crashed and filed a report from the wreckage -- while the
- remains of the UTA airliner were scattered over 40 sq. mi. of
- remote desert. The LaGuardia crash offered both the surefire appeal
- of a happy ending for most passengers and a host of survivors
- available for interviews. The apparent cause of the USAir crash
- was quickly identified as pilot error, while befuddling doubts
- lingered about who bombed the UTA plane and why.
-
- Even so, the relative handling of the stories amounts to a
- blatant rejection of the poetic notion that each time the bell of
- doom tolls, it tolls for all mankind. The collective news judgment
- seems to be that each death diminishes the reader in direct
- proportion to the shared bonds of nationality, ethnicity, religion,
- type of government and the like. Pointing out this callous calculus
- seems to do nothing to mitigate it. As Columbia University
- professor Herbert Gans noted in his 1980 study Deciding What's
- News, network journalists in the 1960s tried to prick their bosses'
- consciences by assembling "a Racial Equivalence Scale, showing the
- minimum number of people who had to die in airline crashes in
- different countries before the crash became newsworthy . . . One
- hundred Czechs were equal to 43 Frenchmen, and the Paraguayans were
- at the bottom." Such bias seems widespread. Fleet Street reporters
- have traditionally voiced, in a blatantly racist and jingoist
- phrase, the equivalence of "1,000 Wogs, 50 Frogs and one Briton."
-
- The disproportion seems to be based on economic as well as
- ethnic factors. Air crashes, which entail millions of dollars in
- losses and mainly affect the affluent middle class, especially
- outside the U.S., command far more coverage than less glamorous
- causes of violent death. On the same day that the New York Times
- was giving front-page play to both air accidents last month, it
- carried three paragraphs at the bottom of an inside page about
- rebel action in Kabul, Afghanistan, that killed twelve people and
- wounded 17. Also in the crash aftermath, an alleged coup attempt
- in Burkina Faso that led to the execution of the second and third
- highest officers of government rated two paragraphs. Murders of
- Vietnamese settlers in Cambodia were cited in part of one paragraph
- in a more general story. That was in the Times, which excels in
- foreign coverage: in many other newspapers the events went
- completely unnoted.
-
- Some foreign violence does get substantial U.S. media coverage.
- But typically this is because American corporate or other interests
- are directly involved -- as when Union Carbide's poison gas cloud
- killed 2,233 people in Bhopal, India, in 1984 -- or because
- humanitarian groups arouse American donors and volunteers, as
- happened with famines in Ethiopia and Biafra. In general, however,
- the scales are so tilted that Hurricane Hugo, which killed 51
- people, got about as much coverage across the U.S. as the 1985
- Mexico City earthquake that claimed 20,000 lives.
-
- Is a moral issue involved here? Or is this simply a reflection
- of a pragmatic attempt by editors to echo the values and interests
- of their readers? And does it really make a difference whether
- Americans know about disasters elsewhere? It certainly does when
- it comes to amassing donations or building a congressional
- coalition for emergency relief. It also matters in a less material
- way because every social contract, from the tribe to the United
- Nations, is based on recognizing common human bonds. Whether the
- fault lies with news consumers or with editors who pander to them,
- the bell ought to toll equally for thee, and thee, and thee.