Crime reporters protest treatment of press
02/28/2013 03:41
Crime reporters walk out of police conference saying treatment of press kept them from reporting important issues.
Police Insp.-Gen. Yohanan Danino at INTERPOL conf Photo: Chen Galilee
A group of around 10 Israeli crime reporters walked out of an event held at Tel
Aviv Police Headquarters on Wednesday, to protest what they say has been police
mismanagement of their relationship with the press, which has kept them from
reporting on issues of public importance.
Police chief Insp.-Gen.Yohanan
Danino took to the stage in front of around 300 police officers, moments after
three young children on stage wearing police hats said, “Who is more attractive
and brave than the police chief?” As the children cleared the stage and Danino
took to the podium, the reporters rose from their seats and walked out in single
file.
At the core of the complaint is what reporters say is a failure
and/or refusal by the national police spokesman’s branch to brief them on issues
of public importance, in particular recent cases such as the investigation of
Education Minister Gideon Sa’ar, the Bayit Yehudi vote-buying scandal, the
investigation of Rabbi Yoshiyahu Pinto and the death of Palestinian prisoner
Arafat Jaradat in Megiddo Prison last week. Their contention is that the use of
sweeping gag orders and the refusal to brief the press on these cases strips the
public of knowledge of stories significant to them.
As one reporter
noted, “I’m sick of hearing from the political reporters about a police
investigation against this politician or another.”
Police contend that
they do not release details about ongoing investigations in order to protect the
privacy and reputations of public figures. The reporters, on the other hand,
contend that on a daily basis there are dozens of reports sent out by police
spokesmen about arrests and investigations of private citizens, who are not
afforded the same privacy considerations as public figures.
The walkout
was greeted with anger by Danino’s spokeswoman Sigal Toledano, who said she
viewed it as a declaration of war of sorts by the reporters. The reporters, for
their part, said they were trying to send a message about public
responsibility.
In a communiqué sent out to an internal list of reporters
via the WhatsApp messaging system, they wrote that “the lack of professionalism
of officials from the top down in the national spokesman’s office places Israeli
reporters in a problematic situation – because they cannot get answers about
issues of importance to Israeli citizens.”
The statement continued: “Over
the past week we’ve been flooded by pictures of the police chief with kids
dressed up on Purim, or the children of police in their Purim costumes. We were
asked by police to publish them in the media. This is not why we chose this
profession. It is time to do something and report to the citizens of Israel
about the important issues taking place in this country.”
A meeting
planned between Danino and reporters that was meant to be held at 3 p.m. was
canceled by the police chief after the walkout took place.
Thus far, the
reporters have vowed to no longer write about Danino or the national police
branch as much as possible, and to only deal with the regional districts’
spokesmen.