Advertise On EU-Digest

Annual Advertising Rates

4/4/16

Journalism: Turkey's all-women news agency works for change in the Middle East - by Lucy Schouten,

Journalists have long been the targets of harassment and even death threats in Turkey. Yet one Turkish news organization is persisting despite tenacious setbacks.

Its website has been blocked four times for "supporting terrorism," and one reporter served three months in jail for covering a political demonstration. But the agency's aim goes one step beyond media freedom — it wants to give women a larger voice in the region by emphasizing and prioritizing their stories.

The Jin News Agency (JINHA) is completely staffed by women, offering news coverage of Turkey, Iraq, and Syria in multiple languages. ("Jin" means "woman" in Kurdish.) It's a strong mandate in a region known for its gender inequality that is also staggering under the weight of conflict.

"JINHA is the only agency of its kind in Turkey, but in the world, too, we are different from our counterparts," editor Dilan Karamanoglu told Al-Monitor. "Even when we cover ordinary events, we strive to highlight whatever is there in terms of female visibility.".

The news agency gives precedence to statements from women during press conferences or seeks to use women or girls as the frame for a story. For example, a report about a Turkish town on the border of Syria that has been reduced to rubble begins, "Cizre women, whose houses have been burned and demolished and belongings have been pillaged, have strengthened [their] resistance and solidarity. The women said, 'All these are temporary.' Women ... [are] ready to rebuild the Cizre district of Şırnak."

The JINHA journalists would be hard-pressed to find a more dangerous headquarters for their experiment. Tensions are escalating in southeastern Turkey between the government and the PKK, or the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, a militant group pushing for Kurdish independence.

The refugee crisis and threats from terrorist groups have strained Turkey's economy and politics, and journalists often pay the price as the government works to block reporting on corruption and national security issues.

Sevgi Akarcesme, editor-in-chief of Today's Zaman, the English version of the daily, told Reuters the raid was "the practical end of media freedom in Turkey," adding that "[t]he media has always been under pressure, but it has never been so blatant." She has since fled to Brussels.

Turkey ranks 77th on a list of 138 countries under a United Nations Development Programme ranking for gender equality .

JINHA is the product of a strong trend of female emancipation and activism that the Kurdish political movement has spurred in Turkey’s southeast over the past several decades," Mahmut Bozarslan reported for Al-Monitor.

In the field, however, the female journalists must sometimes prove themselves to suspicious male colleagues and taunting police officers.

"When our reporters go out, the police threaten them," Guzide Diker, JINHA's English translator, told the Los Angeles Times. "They say: 'Why are you here? Don't come again. If you come again, we will beat you.'"

In the meantime  the female reporters of JINHA have plans for expansion, and soon hope to also report in Arabic.

EU-Digest


No comments: