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5. NEWSPAPER RANKING (worst-to-bad)
not
including circulation factor; a measure of anti-Islam
| # |
2000 |
1999 |
1998 |
| 1 |
National Post |
La Presse |
Toronto Star |
| 2 |
Ottawa
Citizen |
Montreal
Gazette |
Globe and
Mail |
| 3 |
Montreal
Gazette |
Globe and
Mail |
Montreal
Gazette |
| 4 |
La Presse |
Toronto
Star |
Ottawa
Citizen |
| 5 |
Globe and
Mail |
Ottawa
Citizen |
Toronto
Sun* |
| 6 |
Toronto
Star |
National
Post |
|
including
circulation factor; a measure of harmful impact on readers
| # |
2000 |
1999 |
1998 |
| 1 |
National
Post |
Globe and
Mail |
Toronto
Star |
| 2 |
Toronto
Star |
Toronto
Star |
Globe and
Mail |
| 3 |
Globe and
Mail |
La Presse |
Montreal
Gazette |
| 4 |
Ottawa
Citizen |
Montreal
Gazette |
Ottawa
Citizen |
| 5 |
Montreal
Gazette |
National
Post |
Toronto
Sun* |
| 6 |
La Presse |
Ottawa
Citizen |
|
* The Toronto Sun was not ranked in the 1999 and 2000 studies.
6. ANTI-ISLAM IN PUBLISHED ITEMS (worst - to - bad)
a. News by
National Post staff
b. News by
non-Canadian news services
c. News by
Canadian news services
d. Articles
(general and features)
e. Editorials
(only in the National Post)
7. HIGHLIGHTS OF THE 2000 STUDY
The National
Post has shown the worst record of anti-Islam in all three years
of the study. No attempts to improve were recorded, even after
a meeting between National Post senior editors and the CIC.
Published
anti-Islam items in 1999/2000 would have been less by 23% than
those published in 1998/1999 if the National Post is excluded
(otherwise they have doubled). The National Post anti-Islam grade
is 230% more than the average of other newspapers.
The Toronto
Star and The Globe and Mail are credited for showing the most
improvement. The Toronto Star moved up from being the worst offender
in 1998 to the least in 2000. The Globe and Mail moved up from
second worst to the second least offender.
La Presse,
the only French daily studied, has shown a lower degree of anti-Islam
compared to its English counterpart, The Montreal Gazette.
Our study
also included media watches of CBC's English-language TV evening
News, the Candian edition of Readers Digest and the Canadian weekly
Maclean's magazine. Substantial improvements have been recorded
following CIC's meetings with the CBC, Reader's Digest and Maclean's
editorial boards.
8. THE NATIONAL POST "AHEAD" IN ANTI-ISLAM
EXAMPLE
1 - Comment
Paper: The
National Post
Date:
August 7, 1999
Page:
B1
By: Daniel
Pipes
Headline: Behind
the veil of Islam
In Text: Pipes
uses anti-Islam terminology. The Post publishes two photos of veiled
women, one on page B1 (banner) and the other with the article on
page B7.
WORTH NOTING:
the article is NOT about women.
EXAMPLE 2 -
News
Paper: The
National Post
Date:
December 21, 1999
Page:
Front Page A1
By: Stewart
Bell, National Post
Headline: Algeria
considered suspect a terrorist
In Text: "...
Islamic terrorist" twice, "Islamic extremist group".
EXAMPLE 3 -
Editorial
Paper: The
National Post
Date:
December 21, 1999
Page:
A19
Headline: Green
Light
In Text: "...
Islamic terrorists"
WORTH NOTING:
the Toronto Star published a similar editorial on the same day,
on the same subject: "How did terror suspect elude our authorities?"
without using anti-Islam terminology.
EXAMPLE 4 -
News
Paper: The
National Post
Date:
December 22, 1999
Page:
Front Page A1 and A8
By: Drew
Hasselback and Stewart Bell, National Post
Headline: Algerian's
bomb was a building- flattener
In Text: "...
Islamic terrorist", used twice.
EXAMPLE 5 -
News
Paper: The
National Post
Date:
December 22, 1999
Page:
A9
By: Stewart
Bell, National Post
Headline: Alleged
Montreal gang leader deported, official says.
In Text: "...
Islamic terrorists".
EXAMPLE 6 -
News
Paper: The
National Post
Date:
December 22, 1999
Page:
A15
By: Stewart
Bell, National Post
Headline: Canada
not immune to 'devastating' attack, CSIS warns
In Text: "...
Islamic terrorist group"
EXAMPLE 7 -
News
Paper: The
National Post
Date:
December 23, 1999
Page:
A8
By: Stewart
Bell and Jonathan Gatehouse, The National Post
Headline: French
made secret mission to question Atmani
In Text: "...
Islamic terrorists".
WORTH NOTING:
the Globe and Mail published the same story, the same day, on page
A9 without using anti-Islam terminology.
EXAMPLE 8 -
Editorial
Paper: The
National Post
Date:
December 23, 1999
Page:
A18
By: Mark
Steyn
Headline: Easy
come, easy stay
In Text: "...
Islamic terrorist"
EXAMPLE 9 -
News
Paper: The
National Post
Date:
December 24, 1999
Page:
A10
By: Campbell
Clark, The National Post
Headline: Canadian
woman, Algerian linked to terrorist group
In Text: "...
a terrorist group, the Algerian Islamic League"
WORTH NOTING:
the same story was published by both The Toronto Star and The Globe
and Mail on the same day without using anti-Islam terminology.
EXAMPLE 10
- News
Paper: The
National Post
Date:
December 28, 1999
Page:
A7
Source:
Salim Jiwa and Eileen Travers - The Province and The Gazette
Headline: International
links to terror run deep, Montreal police say
In Text: "...
armed Islamic group"
EXAMPLE 11
- News
Paper: The
National Post
Date:
December 30, 1999
Page:
A10
By: Stewart
Bell, The National Post
Headline: Canada
to outlaw fundraising for world terrorism
In Text: "...
Islamic insurgents..... Islamic extremists"
EXAMPLE 12
- News
Paper: The
National Post
Date:
January 20, 2000
Page:
Front Page A1
By: Stewart
Bell, The National Post
Headline: How
an arms smuggler avoided deportation
In Text: "...
Islamic terrorist"
WORTH NOTING:
the same story was published by The Globe and Mail on the same day,
also front page, without using anti-Islam terminology.
EXAMPLE 13
- News
Paper: The
National Post
Date:
January 25, 2000
Page:
A12
Source:
Reuters
Headline: Divorce
law adding balance to Egyptian marriages makes demands on male attitudes
Photo: A veiled
woman
EXAMPLE 14
- News
Paper: The
National Post
Date:
January 28, 2000
Page:
Front Page A1 and A8
By: Stewart
Bell, The National Post
Headline: Alleged
bin Laden associate aided Montreal terror suspect
In Text: "...
Islamic fundamentalists, ..... Islamic terrorists network, .....Muslim
militants"
WORTH NOTING:
the same story was published by The Globe and Mail on the same day,
page A9, without using anti-Islam terminology.
EXAMPLE 15
- News
Paper: The
National Post
Date:
January 29, 2000
Page:
A8
By: Stewart
Bell, National Post
Headline: Mauritian
Suspected of Plotting Attack Detained
In Text: "Islamic
terrorist cell"
EXAMPLE 16
- News
Paper: The
National Post
Date:
January 29, 2000
Page:
A16
Source:
Enif Unal, Reuters
Headline: Muslim
leaders in Turkey denounce Murders
In Text: "...
Islamic extremist murders", "...murdered by Islamic extremists",
"...political Islam", "...Muslim extremism", "... Islamic rule".
EXAMPLE 17
- News
Paper: The
National Post
Date:
February 11, 2000
Page:
A13
By: Stewart
Bell and Jan Cienski, National Post
Headline: Canada
agrees to outlaw terrorist fund-raising
In Text: "...
Islamic militants"
EXAMPLE 18
- News
Paper: The
National Post
Date:
February 17, 2000
Page:
Front Page A1
By: Peter
Morton and Claudia Cathaneo, National Post
Headline: U.S.
imposes sanctions on Talisman Sudan project
In Text: "...
the Muslim government's terrorist leanings"
WORTH NOTING:
the same story was published by The Toronto Star (page A2) and The
Globe and Mail (page A1) on the same day, without using anti-Islam
terminology.
EXAMPLE 19
- News
Paper: The
National Post
Date:
March 22, 2000
Page:
A14
Source:
Rahul Bedi, The Daily Telegraph
Headline: Gunman
who killed 35 Sikh men impersonated soldiers: witnesses
In Text: "...
Muslim terrorist groups"
EXAMPLE 20
- Editorial
Paper: The
National Post
Date:
April 5, 2000
Page:
A19
Headline: A
separate peace ?
In Text: "...
Islamic terrorist organization"
EXAMPLE 21
- Editorial
Paper: The
National Post
Date:
May 23, 2000
Page:
A17
Headline: Risky
bid for peace
In Text: "...
Islamic terrorist group"
EXAMPLE 22
- News
Paper: The
National Post
Date:
August 14, 2000
Page:
A8
Source:
Reuters
Headline: Bomb
blasts raise fears for independence day in India
In Text: "...
amid mounting fears that Islamic militants plan to mark tomorrow's
sensitive independence day celebrations with an intensified campaign
of violence"
====================
Paper: The
Globe and Mail
Date:
August 14, 2000
Page:
A4
Source:
Reuters
Headline: Violence
erupts in India
WORTH NOTING:
no anti-Islam terminology was used
====================
Paper: The
Toronto Star
Date:
August 14, 2000
Page:
A2
Source:
Reuters / Washington Post
Headline: Kashmir
erupts in bloody violence
WORTH NOTING:
no anti-Islam terminology was used
EXAMPLE 23
- News
Paper: The
National Post
Date:
August 28, 2000
Page:
A11
Source:
Reuters
Headline: Muslim
militants free five hostages
====================
Paper: The
Toronto Star
Date:
August 28, 2000
Page:
A10
Source:
Reuters
Headline: Filipino
rebels free five hostages
====================
Paper: The
Globe and Mail
Date:
August 28, 2000
Page:
A7
Source:
Associated Press
Headline: Philippine
rebels free five hostages
EXAMPLE 24
- News
Paper: The
National Post
Date:
August 28, 2000
Page:
A
Source:
The Daily Telegraph with files from Associated Press
Headline: Israelis
shot dead in commando raid by fellow soldiers
In Text: "...
Muslim extremist group Hamas"
====================
Paper: The
Toronto Star
Date:
August 28, 2000
Page:
A
By: Hugh
Dellios, special to the Star
Headline: 'Friendly
fire' may have killed troops
WORTH NOTING:
no anti-Islam terminology was used
EXAMPLE 25
- News
Paper: The
National Post
Date:
August 30, 2000
Page:
A 10
Source:
The New York Times
Headline: Muslim
rebels kidnap American. Abduction follows release of six Western
hostages
====================
Paper: The
Toronto Star
Date:
August 30, 2000
Page:
A12
Source:
Associated Press - Reuters
Headline: Libya
basks in publicity glow of Philippines hostage release
====================
Paper: The
Globe and Mail
Date:
August 30, 2000
Page:
A11
Source:
Reuters
Headline: Libya
laps up publicity for role in hostage release.
"Many of the works studied (here) reveal the hostility of Europeans
toward Islam and the creation of negative stereotypes of Muslims
by Western writers. These essays also reveal attempts at accommodation
and understanding that stand in contrast to the prevailing hostility
that existed then, and in the same ways, exist still today.
Medieval anti-Muslim themes are still being represented in the
Western media and in modern popular culture."
From Michael Frassetto and David R. Blanks:
"Western Views of Islam in Medieval and Early Modern Europe"
1999, St Martin's Press.
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