Huge need for independent media in Middle East: AmmanNet founder Daoud Kuttab
Pintak: So give me an example of the kind of story you’re doing.
Kuttab: Well the economic situation is a huge story for us. They have been in Jordan two rises in the fuel price and therefore the fuel cost has doubled or tripled in about a year. I would guess that in a year more than 50 percent of our programming in one way or another dealt with the pocket books of everyday Jordanians. How they are dealing with the rise in fuel, how they are using alternative fuel, they’re going back to using wood and so on, how there are constant complaints that salaries are going less and less far in each month. So we are doing a lot on economic issues. We are doing a lot on municipal issues. We have just taken on for example the local public transportation. We have a special program called Siyara FM or Car FM where we do almost town-hall meetings where we go out to different communities and talk to different people using the transportation and they are quite angry because, a) the prices of fuel went up and b) there isn’t enough response by the government to the needs of the community. And so these are the issues that touch people’s lives. They are affecting them everyday—the price of fuel, the salaries, how things are going.
We have also recently taken up two campaigns I would call them in that we shed light on issues that have not been covered. The thirty-some Jordanians who are still in Israeli jails after the peace treaty between Jordan and Israel. It’s a very sensitive issue the public media has shied from dealing with and we’ve taken it upon ourselves to humanize this case, spending time with families and making portraits of the thirty prisoners or so who are still held in Israel after fifteen to twenty years of a peace treaty, basically saying these people have a right to go home now that they’re safe. And I think that has already produced results in that for the first time in sixty years the Jordanian government and the Red Cross organized visits for the families to them, and there’s now talk they might be released. This is one campaign.
We also did a campaign this week, or this month, because the media law—the press and publications law that is being discussed in the Jordanian Parliament—still doesn’t include a very clear clause against arresting journalists. And so, together with the Center for the Defence of Journalists, we have created a campaign with interviews and quotations from everyone from the King to former prime ministers, journalists and human rights activists, saying we want the freedom to write without worrying about being put in jail and that freedom of expression should be allowed without interference or the threat of jailing journalists for what they write.
Pintak: Everywhere in the Arab World these days there are red lines journalists can’t cross which vary by country. How close do you get to the red lines in Jordan and are you crossing them, and are you worried about them?
Kuttab: Well there’s constitutional red lines and there’s practical red lines. The constitutional red lines mean that you cannot write anything in any way against the Royal Family. That’s part of the constitution. But in reality the intelligence services—the mukhabarat—is indeed a red line. We have a few times crossed that red line. The Human Rights Watch recent survey of twenty cases of people who were tortured in Jordanian intelligence surveys was one which we highly publicized and they were quite angry with us. They put a lot of pressure on us not to keep it on the website. They seem to be quite worried when you use the actual word ‘mukhabarat’ or ‘intelligence’—there’s some kind of an alarm system that rings in their offices when you use that word. When we use the ‘security forces’ or a general term, they don’t seem to be as upset as when you actually refer specifically to the word ‘mukhabarat’ or ‘intelligence’.
Pintak: You made the jump from the Internet to a real radio station, if I will, in Jordan. How did that happen?
Kuttab: Once the Jordanian Audio-Visual Law came into effect in 2004, we applied like anybody else for a licence. There was a financial problem because the licence fee is quite steep for Amman—about 40 thousand dollars—but there’s this extra fee which is established for anybody wishing to broadcast politics and news. And the fee is 50 percent more than the regular fee. So we had to pay another 20 thousand dollars to get the licence to include news and politics. So once we were able to raise the money and find the sources to be able to pay the fee we applied for a licence and began doing local news and local programming and we added a few more additions. We did a lot more live programming meaning that we would cover events live, whether it was a demonstration or a public event, or as we did in the last year, broadcast live sessions of the Jordanian Parliament. And this was an interesting issue because in the Arab World the executive power is not very keen on people giving attention to the legislative powers, so what we tried to do is to put on air for people in their taxis driving around in the day time live parliamentary sessions so people can hear what’s going on in their parliament and hear their parliamentarians, if they’re speaking, if they’re not speaking, if they’re saying stupid things, if they’re saying good things. And it’s been quite a big hit. People are amused sometimes, they’re educated. But they’re certainly learning a lot more about their MPs and what they’re saying under the roof of the parliament.
Pintak: What kind of audiences are you picking up?
Kuttab: In Amman the capital, it’s basically two sides. There’s West Amman which is about 25 percent of the population, quite affluent and well-to-be, and there’s East Amman which is much more popular and much more populated. Most of our audience is from East Amman. The West Amman public is not a huge target for us. We’re really going after people who are in need of the community services we’re trying to provide and who don’t have access to ways to address their problems and they actually have many more problems. And so we’re getting a huge audience in the more populated and less-developed areas of the city.
Pintak: We should explain for those not sitting in the Middle East or who don’t know the Arab media, how is it that you, a journalism professor at a journalism school in the West Bank, how is that you’re running a radio station in Jordan?
Kuttab: It has nothing to do with my work—I had a tragedy in family and I remarried. And so I commute between Ramallah and Amman. The radio station was an experiment. It was a hobby for a while and then it became a real project. I still run the Institute of Modern Media in Ramallah, part of Al Quds University, and we have also done interesting things there, especially on areas of the parliament. Because in 1996 when we were broadcasting sessions of the Palestinian Parliament dealing with corruption, I also got in trouble there with the Palestinian Authority putting me in jail for seven days. I’m interested in the role of media as an alternative source of public service, and I’m trying to find ways to effect a genuine change in the paradigm. And the paradigm of the media in the Arab World is quite bad. We have a huge influx of foreign media that’s filling up the airwaves, we have a monopoly on radio and television almost in every country and we have a strange alliance between media business people and government. So the real kind of media, you have to search quite hard to find genuine independent media. Blogging is now proving that there are lots people who have local areas of concern who are not finding an airing for this in traditional media and they’re looking for ways to express themselves. So because I’m moving between two countries in a way I’m able to do programs, and I’m blessed with good staff, so I can start projects and let people continue with them.
Pintak: And you’re looking at expanding the concept around the region aren’t you?
Kuttab: I am. Last year in November we had the very first ever conference for global community radios called AMARC (World Association of Community Radio Broadcasters), and AMARC agreed our request to have their once-every-three-years global meeting in Amman. And we introduced the community media and community radio through the conference and since then we have established a network of activists in community radio and hopefully we will have another conference in Morocco this year, 2007, all aimed at trying to introduce the concept of community radio and the need for governments who are interested in development and who support the idea of community radio so yes, I am involved there.
I have also started a project last year setting up nine Internet radio stations in the Gulf countries and Yemen. The project is called KhaleejNet.net. It’s a project where we’re training active journalists in how to do Internet radio, helping set up a website for them, and giving them simple tools—software and hardware—and basically allowing them to broadcast their radio or audio programs on Internet sites that have names, from Kuwait or from Yemen and Dubai and so on. So we have quite an interesting group of authentic local young journalists who are interested in explaining what they think is happening in their countries or cities using the Internet radio medium. Again we’re hoping that our experiment in AmmanNet would be replicated in the sense that if in some of these countries Internet radio succeeds enough, there will be enough local support to convince government to actually allow people to have FM radio, not just Internet radio.

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