Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Allegra Garrett


Allegra Garrett
Jihad/Terrorism in the Media
April 5, 2012

Fox News recently published an article about a French Muslim gunman named Mohammed Merah who is believed to have killed at least seven people on film. He is believed to be connected to the notorious Al-Qaeda organization. The link to the full article is below:
Mohammed Merah, a 23-year old Frenchman, who is also Muslim, was killed by police in a shoot-out after a 32 hour stand-off on March 22. The Al-Jazeera News Network received a video tape in the mail of suspect Merah’s attacks and murders of three paratroopers, three Jewish schoolchildren, and one rabbi. The videos were filmed from the murderer’s perspective, seemingly from a camera that had been hung around the perpetrators neck. Al-Jazeera decided not to air the tapes.

One of the big questions that the French police have is “who sent the tapes”? They believe that Merah was probably not the sender of the videotapes, the main suspect being his brother. The contents of the tapes, besides graphic killings, include “religious songs, and recitations of Quranic verses laid over the footage,” with screams from the victims and the murderers voice being heard during other parts. Merah’s father, who does not live in France, was upset by the fact that his son was killed by police instead of being taken in and “judged.” President of the French government, Mr. Nicolas Sarkozy, has explained that he will take measures to stop the spread of “radical ideas” and to “[penalize] those who regularly consult websites that promote jihad”.

In this particular article, there are no redeeming qualities applied to Muslims and no actual explanation of what jihad is. In my opinion, this article relies mostly on stereotypes of violence coming from Muslims. Discrimination against Muslims is very high in France, which is where this article comes from (Paris to be exact), the article ending with explanations from Sarkozy to basically try and “expel radicals” and keep them out of France. This article is from Fox News, which is known to have American, right-wing bias, being recognized to have portrayed Muslims in a negative light more often than not (i.e. Bill O’Reilly). Perspectives of other French Muslims, the majority of whom are not violent or associated with Al-Qaeda and who happen to be a large part of the population of France, were not at all interviewed and not really mentioned in this article. The perspectives of the controversial president Sarkozy and the views of the police are essentially the only ones elaborated on.

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