Saturday, June 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

White House Says: Media Need To Cover Terrorism More, Cites Canadian Examples

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Feb, 2017 12:53 PM
    WASHINGTON — The White House wants journalists to write more stories about terrorist attacks, which President Donald Trump says are being under-reported.
     
    Asked for examples, his office released a list of attacks — including two in Canada in 2014.
     
    It's a striking change from the last administration which, in an effort to calm anxieties, tended to emphasize how rare terrorist attacks actually are: some media have calculated that more people in the U.S. were accidentally killed by toddlers with guns than Islamist terrorists in 2015.
     
    Almost 100 times more people around the world were killed by malaria in 2014, according to the international aid organization Oxfam. Almost 200 times more people were killed that year by a diarrheal disease.
     
    But terrorism needs more attention, Trump said.
     
    "You've seen what happened in Paris and Nice. All over Europe it's happening. It's gotten to a point where it's not even being reported," Trump said this week, during an event with enlisted military personnel. "And in many cases, the very, very dishonest press doesn't want to report it. They have their reasons and you understand that."
     
    During a photo-op with country sheriffs, Trump made the point again Tuesday: ''I happen to know how dishonest the media is.''
     
    Asked what Trump was talking about, his spokesman Sean Spicer promised to provide a list of examples. When that list was distributed to U.S. journalists it included 78 such incidents from 2014 to 2016.
     
    The list included two attacks in Canada in 2014: the killing of Warrant Officer Patrice Vincent in Quebec, followed by the shooting of Cpl. Nathan Cirillo and the gun attack on Parliament Hill.
     
    "We want to be very clear there are a lot of examples," Spicer said, when asked about the list. ''Many of them haven't gotten the attention they have deserved. It's becoming too often that we're seeing these attacks not get the spectacular attention they deserve.''
     
    The suggestion these killings were ignored would surprise Canadian media-monitoring firms. One such firm, Montreal-based Influence Communications, shared its statistics for media coverage of events in 2014.
     
    The No. 1 most-covered story in Canada by international media that year was the Parliament Hill shooting, Influence said. No. 3 was the killing of Vincent in St-Jean-sur-Richelieu.
     
    CNN's Anderson Cooper came to Ottawa to broadcast from the scene. In fact, some media critics at the time mocked American television networks for over-dramatizing the unfolding danger, compared with the more cautious coverage in Canada.
     
    ''It was a gigantic story,'' said Jean-Francois Dumas of Influence Communication.
     
    ''It was a big story around the world.''
     
    The most-covered stories in Canada by international media that year, aside from terrorism, were the Keystone XL pipeline, the late Rob Ford's troubles and illness and Michaelle Jean's election as head of the Francophonie.
     
    The firm did not provide international statistics on coverage of malaria, diarrheal diseases, and toddlers with guns.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Imam Hassan Guillet Says Speech That Was Re-tweeted By J.K. Rowling Came From His Heart

    Imam Hassan Guillet Says Speech That Was Re-tweeted By J.K. Rowling Came From His Heart
    An imam who spoke at the funerals for three Quebec mosque shooting victims says he believes his words have become popular on social media because his message came from the heart.

    Imam Hassan Guillet Says Speech That Was Re-tweeted By J.K. Rowling Came From His Heart

    Shafia Brother Convicted Of Killing 4 Women Asks Top Court To Hear His Case

    Shafia Brother Convicted Of Killing 4 Women Asks Top Court To Hear His Case
    Hamed Shafia and his parents were found guilty in January 2012 of four counts of first-degree murder — killings their trial judge described as being motivated by their "twisted concept of honour."

    Shafia Brother Convicted Of Killing 4 Women Asks Top Court To Hear His Case

    Judge To Give Verdict For Winnipeg Woman Accused Of Hiding Dead Babies In Locker

    Judge To Give Verdict For Winnipeg Woman Accused Of Hiding Dead Babies In Locker
    A judge is to give his decision today in the case of a woman charged with disposing of the remains of six infants in a Winnipeg storage locker.

    Judge To Give Verdict For Winnipeg Woman Accused Of Hiding Dead Babies In Locker

    Pentagon Meeting Today: A First For Members Of Trump-Trudeau Cabinets

    WASHINGTON — Canadian Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan is to hold a first meeting today with his newly sworn-in American counterpart James Mattis.

    Pentagon Meeting Today: A First For Members Of Trump-Trudeau Cabinets

    O No, Canada: Singer Flubs Anthem At Raptors Game In NYC

    O No, Canada: Singer Flubs Anthem At Raptors Game In NYC
    A Broadway performer botched the Canadian national anthem before the Toronto Raptors' game in Brooklyn on Sunday, singing lyrics that aren't in "O Canada."

    O No, Canada: Singer Flubs Anthem At Raptors Game In NYC

    Canadian Military To Become First To Issue Guidelines On Child Soldiers

    Canadian Military To Become First To Issue Guidelines On Child Soldiers
    The Canadian military is poised to become the first in the world to issue guidelines for dealing with child soldiers, as it prepares to deploy hundreds of peacekeepers to Africa.

    Canadian Military To Become First To Issue Guidelines On Child Soldiers