Minneapolis Star Tribune Readers’ Representative Kate Parry comments on her paper’s inconsistency in labelling ‘terrorists’:
The Star Tribune has taken considerable heat over this language. “This issue has come up countless times over the past several years, and we’ve had an ongoing conversation with our staff about the use of language in sensitive stories involving acts of violence, war and terrorism. We believe our policy is consistent with all other major newspapers and wire services,” said managing editor Scott Gillespie.
But the current approach ultimately doesn’t treat all countries equally when they are victims of virtually identical terrorist violence. I disagree with Gillespie and think the newspaper needs to go another round in this debate to strive for a style and policy that is fairer and more consistent.
The inconsistent language in wire service stories the Star Tribune publishes about terrorism has left some readers believing a double standard exists for certain countries or parts of the world. The Star Tribune should challenge that uneven language, editing wire stories for consistency no matter where terrorists strike. Editors make changes in wire stories for many other reasons…
The bombings July 7 in London were quickly labeled terrorist attacks by the wire services. But a July 12 suicide bombing outside a Netanya, Israel, shopping mall was attributed to “Islamic Jihad militants,” a group on the U.S. State Department’s list of terrorist organizations…
Reinforcing the tendency to treat Israel differently is another entry in the Star Tribune stylebook, which says Hamas is to be referred to in shorthand as “a militant Islamic group” and if it is a major part of a story it should be added that it “has been designated by the U.S. government as a terrorist organization.” The wires treat Islamic Jihad the same way. The stylebook and wires use no such qualifier with Al-Qaida, simply labeling it a “terrorist network” with no reference to the U.S. government’s designation…
To my mind, when a person intent on a cause straps explosives to his body and detonates himself to harm nearby civilians, he and his supporters become terrorists. Period… Whether suicide bombers and others deliberately blow up children and their parents in Oklahoma City, New York, Baghdad, London, Netanya in Israel or Sharm el-Sheik in Egypt, at that horrific moment the perpetrators become terrorists, wiping away all complexity and nuance regarding their cause. (emphasis added)
See more from HonestReporting on calling terror by its name.