
The Impact of Arab Satellite Television on the Prospects for Democracy in the Arab World
By S. Abdallah Schleifer
Has Arab satellite television had a positive
impact on the prospects for democracy in the Arab world? Yes, and in more ways
than one might imagine.
News in the Arab World Before
the Age of Satellite TV
Little more than a decade ago
there was no such thing as television journalism in the Arab world. State-owned
national television channels had news bulletins, but in the sense of news
value—stories covered and transmitted because of some intangible but intrinsic
news value about which professionals are almost always in a rough consensus —
there was no such thing as “TV journalism.”
News bulletins were dominated by footage covering ceremonial occasions of state,
and this held true whether the country was a republic or a monarchy: the ruler
receiving newly accredited diplomats; the ruler hosting another head of state
and, more recently, with his guest addressing the press; the ruler received at
the airport upon returning home; the ruler addressing parliament on a
significant occasion; the ruler inaugurating a new dam or some other massive
facility. But do not imagine that state television was devoted solely to
recording ceremonial activities of the ruler; there was also the prime minister
— the prime minister convening a meeting of the cabinet; the prime minister or
other ministers opening factories.
In this sealed universe, there were no television reporters, just a cameraman
who recorded the event, editing-in-camera so to speak, in order that his film or
tape could be played directly that evening on the news, while a presenter read
wire copy from the state or semi-official news agency that had covered the same
event. Since the wire copy only approximated the footage being shown—the same
event but with nothing written to picture, nor any picture edited to fit the
copy— there was always a desultory, oddly detached quality, aside from the basic
banality of the events that were covered.
Unlike radio there was no comparison effect. Terrestrial television had a range
of 50 miles. With boosters the signal could be relayed the length of a country
but not beyond its borders. Unlike BBC Arabic Radio Service, which anyone could
listen to in the Arab world, no one in the Arab world could see BBC television
news, or any other broadcaster (be they American, French, or Italian) covering
the news according to international standards.
Global television news agencies supplied videos of major international news,
which at times included regional events like the civil war in Lebanon. But
again, this was footage from the field, not a field report. The television news
agencies provided pictures and a written description of the shots, the location,
and names of personalities, but it did not include a script which could be
translated and read. The national television channels would again take copy from
their own state news agency, or even an international news agency— the copy
carefully vetted so as not to contradict the official take on the event. But
again, this wasn’t a news report, and the copy the anchor read rarely amplified
the significance of the picture shown. If it did, the result was purely
accidental since the idea of writing to picture was part of the art of a
television journalism that simply wasn’t practiced.
Regional news —a coup, a civil war, a massacre—might never be broadcast if
deemed embarrassing to a friendly fellow Arab state. Or perhaps a report would
finally appear a few days late because the channel had waited for the political
leadership to decide what its response to the event in a neighboring country
might be. Of course this could be ludicrous since short-wave radio — BBC Arabic
service, VOA and Monte Carlo Arabic radio—would already be reporting on these
events. So at the very least, the “educated classes” —a linguistic flourish I’ve
gotten use to, living as I do in the Arab world— were aware of the event. Most
notoriously in that vein, was the failure of the Saudi official media to mention
the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait for more than 48 hours after the event.
President Sadat and Me
I must confess that once one
understood the system, it had its extra-journalistic uses. Let’s say our bureau
(at the time, the NBC News Bureau) was in desperate need of a
difficult-to-secure international telephone line. There were very few available
in Cairo in the mid-seventies. I knew President Sadat was to inaugurate a new
cultural center, so that morning I would show up with my camera crew. Of course
NBC News wouldn’t have had the slightest interest in the event, and I had no
intention of shipping the film we would shoot. Needless to say, my competition,
CBS and ABC, weren’t covering; only an Egypt TV cameraman who would always
accompany the President would be doing so. Which was just fine. At the right
moment I would approach the President and ask him for his reaction to any
seemingly relevant question or two —a rumor from Washington, a report from Tel
Aviv. Needless to say, my crew would film the stand-up interview. But more
importantly, Egypt TV, not having its own correspondent, would film every second
of the interview. Now in those days there was no television to watch outside
Egypt TV, and that night 50 million Egyptians would watch the President and me
chatting together about reports from Washington and Tel Aviv, just like old
friends. The next morning I would rush over to the Ministry of
Telecommunications where everybody would recognize me—it was the foreign
correspondent friend of the President! I would be ushered into the office of the
minister, and within minutes, the phone line was ours.
The CNN Effect
What changed all of this—and
here is a pertinent lesson of how benign foreign intervention by force of
example can be a motor for change in the Arab world—was CNN coverage of the
build-up and the eventual combat between the American-led Alliance and Iraq in
1991. There were very few dishes in the Arab world at the time, but given the
need to dispel outrageous Iraqi radio propaganda, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and other
Arab countries in the American-led Alliance pulled down CNN 24/7 coverage of the
build-up and then the war, subsequently re-transmitting them via terrestrial
television. Suddenly, Arabs could see events in the Arab world significantly
covered—CNN reporters out in the field coming back with finished reports. Since
the reports were in English, English speakers were suddenly in great demand in
millions of Arab households and coffee shops. In Egypt, a new pay TV company,
CNE, continued to retransmit CNN terrestrially after the war had ended.
Saudi private interests with very close ties to the palace sensed the importance
of satellite news and the potential for mischief if placed in the wrong hands.
They quickly moved after the war ended to establish a satellite channel with
morning and evening news bulletins transmitting real reports— footage from the
field edited into meaningful news stories by Arab correspondents in the field
with their cameramen. That channel, MBC, was logically based in London where
there was already a cadre of expatriate Arab journalists trained to
international standards, or trainable by executives brought in from the BBC and
ITN. There the ambience in no way resembled that of state television channels,
which were literally extensions of the ministries of information, invariably
occupying the same building.
Again one must acknowledge outside influence, in this case at work as ambience
(the ambience of London), where the coverage of political life could be
simplified into a schematic which goes, “Here is a problem; here are the
contending solutions to that problem.” This contrasts vividly with what had
become, after the 1948 defeat in Palestine and the waves of coup d’etats and
revolution that followed, the prevailing mode of thought and expression in Arab
media. This mode was reflected above all in the commentaries of the state-owned
or directed printed press, which were always long on commentaries and short on
news. And that mode of thought and expression is that every problem has its
roots in a conspiracy, and the contending issues were, or in some cases still
are, between rival or shifting conspiracy theories — a political media
environment that has been described so well by our colleague Saad ad-Din Ibrahim
at a media conference last year in Cambridge. His paper, entitled “Thoughts in
Arab Satellite Television, Pan Arabism, and Freedom of Expression” can be found
in the Fall/Winter issue of Transnational Broadcasting Studies at
www.tbsjournal.com
The Rise of Al Jazeera and Other
Satellite Channels
In such an environment, real
news reports from the field, narrated in Arabic and available on television, was
a stunning experience. MBC quickly acquired a large audience particularly in the
Gulf and eastern Saudi Arabia because the satellite signal was downloaded in
Bahrain and retransmitted terrestrially. In those parts of Arabia and the Gulf,
MBC took major audience share.
Other channels followed, and after an aborted attempt at 24/7 Arab language TV
news coverage produced by BBC in the service of another Saudi group, the newly
installed Emir of Qatar provided funds and facility to launch Al Jazeera in
1996, approximating the BBC model of public owned but not state controlled
television. The core staff at Al Jazeera had all been trained, and served as
broadcasters at BBC.
By now, dishes and a number of entertainment satellite channels were
proliferating across most of the Arab world. That proliferation of dishes
provided Al Jazeera with a rapidly growing mass audience, now estimated at more
than 50 million viewers. Because Al Jazeera is a 24/7 news operation, it quickly
seized the leadership position in Arab satellite broadcasting; a position that
would not be significantly challenged until just before the invasion of Iraq,
when the MBC group which had first launched TV news coverage in a limited news
bulletin format back in 1992, now gathered together a group of Arab journalists,
including the first news director at Al Jazeera and a number of Al Jazeera
reporters, and launched Al Arabiya. The competition has had a positive effect.
Arab satellite television journalists are less likely to indulge their personal
ideological takes on the news when they know a more detached, and thus a more
reliable version of the same event is available on the TV screen just one click
away on everybody’s remote control.
So here we have one of those amazing historic reverses: The most servile, the
most state controlled, the least professional of all media in the Arab world, is
suddenly refashioned in a satellite format, providing news reports more in
accord with international professional standards than any other form of media in
the region. And because those reports can be uplinked from Europe to a satellite
which can download these reports to dishes anywhere in the Arab world, this
becomes an uncensorable format due to the transmission technology and satellite
links.
For many Arabs, however, the great joy in Al Jazeera was to watch the several
“Cross-fire” types of political talk shows that would pit critics of Arab
regimes against their defenders: Islamists against either liberal secularists or
Arab nationalists. While debates that were unimaginable on the state national
television channels flowed back and forth, the audience could join in by
telephone, again expressing their own opinions, and doing so in a manner also
unimaginable only a decade ago. But as Ibrahim Helal, former chief editor at Al
Jazeera, acknowledged at that same Cambridge conference on Arab media last
winter, all too often these talk shows degenerated into unproductive shouting
matches in which abuse replaced dialogue and analysis. One senses that these
talk shows are too often a vehicle for the collective venting of emotion rather
than exercises in critical thinking.
I would argue that it is informed opinion that is of value—not opinion for its
own sake. The Arab world has for too long suffered from the conspiracy mania and
political hysteria fostered by uninformed opinion. Reporting from the field, and
reporting the facts as they are in the field, informs opinion.
When Saad ad-Din Ibrahim was finally released from prison, during which time he
had been vilified by nearly the entire Egyptian press, it was Al Jazeera that
interviewed Saad ad- Din and allowed him to again raise the very issue—the
possibility of hereditary succession to power in Egypt—which had resulted in his
imprisonment in the first place. A critical issue for the democratic process had
been put into play by a news report; by an interview. This novelty offered great
improvement over the previously dominant confrontational talk shows, which at
best function after the facts are established, but all too often are oblivious,
if not indifferent to facts.
News and the Cultivation of a
Democratic Consciousness
Both Al Jazeera and Al Arabiya
responded to widespread concern and anger in the Arab world with America’s
deepening involvement in the region—in particular the invasion and occupation of
Iraq and what has appeared as continued U.S. support for the Israeli occupation
of the Palestinian territories— by increasing coverage of American political
life. This involved providing intensive coverage of the 2004 U.S. presidential
election campaign. Even if the interest in the campaign was stimulated in part
by the fact that several of the contenders for the Democratic Party nomination
challenged the wisdom and conduct of the invasion of Iraq, the result was
nonetheless extraordinary coverage of the democratic process starting from the
time of the primaries.
Indeed, Hugh Miles, the author of a recent book about Al Jazeera, observed at a
recent media workshop in Doha that Al Jazeera has done more to educate Arabs
about democracy than any other broadcaster. He was alluding to Al Jazeera’s
regular weekly program, “From Washington,” with guests from both the
administration and the opposition, as well as the special weekly show, “US
Presidential Race,” which started in January 2004. The latter program took great
pains to educate Arab viewers on the American political and electoral process,
how delegates to the conventions are chosen, how the modern primary system
evolved, and how the Electoral College functions. This show was supplemented by
special reports, documentaries, and live coverage of many of the highlights in
the primary campaigns, the conventions (with four reporters covering both
conventions) and then the election campaign itself.
In contrast to the usual confrontational talk shows, Al Jazeera’s programs,
“From Washington” and “the American Presidential Face,” produced by the
Washington bureau and hosted by Al Jazeera’s veteran correspondent, Hafez Al
Mirazi, had a distinctly informative style. These shows, and in particular the
latter one, were obviously designed to help viewers newly interested in American
politics to easily understand what was happening during the campaign, and to
grasp the basic workings of the American democratic system. The coverage
deepened the Arab world’s factual, rather than imaginatively preconceived,
understanding of America. As an additional side effect, it provided a
familiarization course in the operations of a functioning democracy. A similar
effect has been underway in the intense reporting on political life in England
by the Al Jazeera and Al Arabiya bureaus in London. Again, the stimulus may be
issues of particular interest to an Arab audience, such as the debates in
parliament related to the Iraqi invasion, but the side-effect has been a
protracted education in the democratic process.
The importance of this development cannot be exaggerated. Until a few years ago,
there was not a single Center for American studies at any Arab university. Now
there are two: one is at Cairo university, and the other has just started at the
American University in Cairo, funded interestingly enough by the Saudi Prince
and global investor, Alwalid bin Talal (who is deeply involved in Arab satellite
television). Additionally, the RAND Corporation has launched a regional research
center in Qatar, the host country for Al Jazeera.
Two other elections have had a profound effect on stimulating the democratic
process in the Arab world. I am referring to the Palestinian election for
President (which was a contested election), and also the local elections in
which Hamas entered the political process and did quite well, suggesting to
Fatah’s leadership that there is a price to be paid for the sort of casual
corruption that characterized Palestinian Authority’s rule in the territories
since Oslo.
But the election with the greatest impact of all was the one in Iraq, in which
millions of Arabs watched millions of Iraqis braving terrorist threats to vote
in a highly competitive election. And the great question those elections pose in
the consciousness of every Arab, in every Arab country, is: If free, competitive
elections can be held in Iraq, despite a violent insurgency and a foreign
occupation, then why not here?