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30.11.02, 01:50
www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_PrintFriendly&c=Article&cid=1035774880117
Iraq wants press at inspections — UN doesn't
Inspectors say reporters will make it difficult to do 'professional job'
BASSEM MROUE
ASSOCIATED PRESS
BAGHDAD — The inspectors don't want journalists at their elbows. The Iraqis
say they'll give them free rein. With their cameras and instant analysis,
international journalists have become an early point of contention in the
tense showdown over Iraq.
When the two leaders of the inspection program — Hans Blix and Mohamed
ElBaradei — met with Iraqi officials last week, they made clear that they did
not want journalists tagging along with inspectors — especially at suspected
weapons sites.
"We don't want journalists to be with us in the facilities," said Melissa
Fleming, spokeswoman of the International Atomic Energy Agency. "We believe
we can't carry out our professional job" with journalists in tow.
But Iraq, which maintains one of the most restrictive press policies in the
Mideast, is now championing free access for journalists — at least as far as
covering the inspections is concerned. Iraqi officials say they want maximum
media coverage to prove to the world that they don't have weapons of mass
destruction, despite Washington's claims to the contrary.
"We will allow everybody to follow in order that international public opinion
be acquainted with what is going on in our country and from our point of
view, the press will be granted full access to every single site," an Iraqi
official said on condition of anonymity.
"Taking into consideration the transparency of our position, we are not
hiding anything," the official said. "Every journalist is allowed."
UN officials appeared concerned that reporters, lacking the inspectors'
technical and scientific expertise, might be too quick to report that no
banned materials had been found before the experts had time to draw their own
conclusions.
Apparently realizing the impossibility of excluding the media entirely, the
UN team proposed that a limited number of journalists representing print,
photos and television be allowed to go along on the first inspection today.
The UN team proposed that it organize and manage the media pool.
The Iraqis, however, insisted it was their country and they would be
responsible for media arrangements. On Tuesday, the Information Ministry told
each news organization that it would be permitted to send at least two
representatives along with the inspectors and a large contingent followed the
inspectors to the first site, a military-run Graphite Rod Factory, 40
kilometres southwest of Baghdad.
Senior inspector Dimitriou Perricos told reporters Tuesday that journalists
could accompany the teams to the site but must stay outside.
The UN team is clearly reluctant to have journalists reporting what the
inspectors have or have not found, especially since those findings may not be
clear to the professionals themselves without lengthy analysis of data.
Blix told the UN Security Council on Monday that he had advised the Iraqis
that inspections were "serious business" and "could not be allowed to turn
into some circus."
"We want to be the ones who draw the conclusions about what we see," added
Fleming.
"We are the experts. Our nuclear inspectors know what given dual use items
might mean, whereas a journalist doesn't."
"So we don't think it will be helpful at all to have the media with us during
inspection," she continued. "We hope to be as forthcoming as we can, after an
inspection to provide a certain amount of information."