Smuggled Images of Israeli Assault
Gaza Raid Photos Fuel Propaganda War
By Daniel Steinvorth and Christoph Schult
SPIEGEL ONLINE 06/16/2010
www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,700992,00.html
The deadly raid on the Gaza aid flotilla triggered a propaganda war between
Israel and pro-Palestinian activists. Surprisingly, it was Turkish newspaper
Hürriyet that published the most spectacular photos.
On Friday, June 4, an agitated man with a bald head and full gray beard
walked into the headquarters of the Muslim aid organization IHH in Istanbul.
The 53-year-old man identified himself as Kevin Neish, a peace activist and
amateur photographer from Victoria, Canada. Four days previously he had been
on board the Turkish ship Mavi Marmara, he said. He had taken photos that
night when Israeli soldiers stormed the vessel. "Do you have a computer?"
Neish asked breathlessly and handed a memory card containing digital photos
to a surprised office worker.
The photos that appeared on a computer screen at IHH provide a fairly
accurate portrayal of what happened on May 31 some 100 kilometers off the
Israeli coast. They show two pro-Palestinian activists armed with iron bars
standing in front of a door. One of the photos shows an Israeli soldier
covered in blood and lying on the floor, the other shows a dead activist who
appears to have been shot in the head. The photos show that a deadly scuffle
took place on board -- one in which activists were killed by Israeli
soldiers, but which was provoked by the Turkish and Arab passengers of the
Mavi Marmara.
The IHH staff didn't like every photo they saw. Only Neish, who had managed
to smuggle the memory card past the Israeli authorities and into Turkey,
felt satisfied. "I hid the card everywhere while the soldiers were
questioning us," he said. "I had it in my mouth, once in my shoes, and once
in my underpants."
Three days later, on June 7, the photos were published in Turkish newspaper
Hürriyet -- together with other photos taken by Turkish photographer Adem
Özköse, who works for the Islamic publishing house Hayat Dergisi.
The fact that "the moments when the Israeli soldiers were beaten up," as
Hürriyet put it, were published in a Turkish newspaper of all places is the
climax of a bizarre war of interpretation that pro-Palestinian activists and
the Israeli government have been waging against each other ever since the
deadly raid.
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan railed against Israel's
"banditry and piracy." But Hürriyet belongs to the media group of
entrepreneur Aydin Dogan which has been critical of the government in the
past. Initially, Dogan's newspapers had criticized the Israeli raid just
like Turkey's pro-government papers. But since then they have been warning
against excessive Israel bashing and against the prime minister's
increasingly authoritarian style of government.
Clash Between Turkish Newspapers
"I am afraid," wrote Turkish political columnist Nuray Mert, "not just
because emotions have supplanted reason in foreign policy but because one is
immediately accused of Zionism and silenced whenever one criticizes
government policy."
Erugrul Özkök, the former editor-in-chief of Hürriyet, regards the photos as
a "journalistic success" that could not be censored. "Israel damaged itself
with this mission, but it is also wrong of Erdogan not to classify Hamas as
a terrorist organization," he said.
Pro-government newspapers are accusing the Dogan group of playing into
Israel's hands by publishing the photos. Fehmi Koru, one of the best-known
columnists close to the ruling AKP party, has a simple explanation for the
approach being taken by Dogan's paper's: the media mogul is a business
partner of Germany's Axel Springer publishing group, says Koru, and Springer
pursues a strategy of unquestioning solidarity with the Jewish state.
Springer rejects this as absurd.
But not everyone in Israel is happy about the publication of the beaten-up
soldiers. The sight of comrades in peril could hurt the morale of the
troops, some generals fear -- an argument the army command used to try to
prevent publication of video footage on the day of the raid. It took more
than 12 hours for black-and-white sequences from the beatings to be made
public, but by that time the version of the pro-Gaza activists was already
dominating the news.
Reuters Criticized for Cropping Photos
But for the political leadership in Jerusalem, the photos are final proof
that activists on the Mavi Marmara wanted to "lynch" the soldiers. As a
result, Jerusalem was all the angrier when the Reuters news agency
manipulated the photos before it passed them on to its clients, newspapers
and television stations around the world. On one photo showing an Israeli
photo lying on the floor, Reuters cropped out the hand of one
pro-Palestinian activist holding a knife, and on another photo a pool of
blood was missing.
The agency has been accused before of editing photos in Israel's disfavor.
During the 2006 Lebanon war, a Reuters photographer added darkened smoke in
a picture of Beirut, which made an Israeli air raid look far more dramatic.
Reuters said the most recent image crops were a mistake. But Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said they were further evidence of the
"prejudice" of the international community.
That is one reason why the Israeli cabinet this week rejected an
international investigation of the incident. It will only allow two
"international observers" to join the Israeli commission which will be led
by the former judge of the top court, Jacob Turkel. But those two foreign
observers are known as being friendly towards Israel: David Trimble, the
Protestant Nobel Peace Prize winner from Northern Ireland, and the former
Canadian judge Ken Watkin, who converted to Judaism several years ago.
The Turkel commission is only supposed to clarify whether Israel acted in
accordance with international law. Only the army itself is permitted to
investigate the actual military operation.
There is cause to doubt that the international community will be satisfied
with that. It has not ruled out that the UN Security Council will yet vote
in favor of instituting a commission. Turkey, which currently is a member of
the Council, is insisting on one. Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said
Ankara doesn't trust the Israeli commission. Israel, he said, was in the
dock, yet wanted to be prosecutor and judge at the same time.
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