BIG STORIES :
News Corp. | Phone Hacking Scandal | WikiLeaks | Barack Obama | Julian Assange | 2012 U.S. Election | Religion | See All
iMEDIAETHICS.org
Seperator
 
Tips Facebook Twitter Twitter Twitter RSS Feeds
 
Home | | Contact Us

International Media Ethics News :
Daily Media Pick
Comments (0)
Print Tweet Email

Reuters Defends, Re-Assigns Reporter Who Also Works for Yemen's President

By: Sydney Smith
November 18, 2011 03:00 PM EST
 
Reuters Defends, Re-Assigns Reporter Who Also Works for Yemen's President
 
Reuters issued a statement on Mohamed Sudam. (Credit: Facebook, screenshot)
 

Reuters is defending one of its reporters in Yemen, Mohamed Sudam, after it was revealed that he also works for the Yemeni president, the New York Times reported.  However, the news outlet did later re-assign Sudam following the patently obvious questions of conflict of interest.

Sudam has been working for Yemeni president Ali Abdullah Saleh as his "personal translator" for "several years."  As such, "netizens" have claimed Reuters' reporting on Yemen is biased, according to Global Voices. Reuters initially issued a statement on the issue, published on the blog Felix Arabia.

"For more than 160 years, Reuters coverage has been a trusted source in the Middle East. Mohammed Suddam's contributions to the file as a stringer are balanced and meet the high standards we set for the news organization globally."

Later, Reuters announced that while his work had been "fair and accurate," Reuters decided "it's not appropriate to use a stringer who is also working for the government." Instead, Sudam may report "from elsewhere in the Middle East." See Reuters' full statement here on Facebook.

According to the Times, Sudam told Reuters about his work for the president when he was hired as translator. Further, the Times said that Sudam's translator job "was well known but largely ignored by many inside Yemen’s small world of journalists."

The Times suggested that the turning point was Sudam's October 2011 arrest. While the organization Yemen Journalist Syndicate argued he should be released since he's a reporter, Sudam may have actually been arrested because he was recognized as a government employee.

According to the Times, Committee to Protect Journalists' Mohamed Abdel Dayem said, "On the face of it, it seems to me that Reuters is making the right call. He’s not an analyst; he’s a translator. It becomes politically inflammatory, but there isn’t an inherent conflict of interest."

Line
Print   Print
Line
Twitter   Tweet
Report an Error Report an Error
Email   E-mail
Link Send a Tip
 
 
  RESOURCES FOR EDUCATORS
 
Checkout iMediaEthics Resources for Educators, a helpful section for colleges, institutions, students and teachers.
Ethics Codes Case Studies Sites We Like
Ethics Codes Case Studies Sites We Like
 
   DAVID MOORE ON POLLS [See All]   
9 in 10 Americans can be classified as Racist against Either Blacks or Whites?  What the AP Poll on Racial Attitudes really tells Us, Part 2.
PollSkeptic Report:   9 in 10 Americans can be classified as Racist...
What the AP Poll on Racial Attitudes Really Tells Us, Part 1
PollSkeptic Report:   What the AP Poll on Racial Attitudes Really Tells...
David Moore
PollTalk Blog:   3 in 10 Voters Believe Armed Revolution Might Be...
   MORE BY THIS AUTHOR [See All]   
   SIMILAR TOPIC
 
Florida A & M Student Named In Hazing Death Sues Student Paper, TV News For Libel
Florida A & M Student Named In Hazing Death Sues Student Paper, TV News For Libel
A student at Florida A & M University has sued two...
 
Boston Newspaper Owner's Daughter-in-Law running for state senate? Does an Ombudsman fix conflict of interest?
Boston Newspaper Owner's Daughter-in-Law running for state senate? Does an Ombudsman fix conflict of interest?
 
Hukkster dupes NYT, Provides Source, Who (Surprise!)  is a Friend of Owner
Hukkster dupes NYT, Provides Source, Who (Surprise!) is a Friend of Owner
The name huckster alone should give one pause. And...
 
Prosecutor: If Manning Leaked to New York Times, Not Wikileaks, Same Charges
Prosecutor: If Manning Leaked to New York Times, Not Wikileaks, Same Charges
In the ongoing case against Private Bradley Manning, the...
 
   TWITTER
   FACEBOOK
   LATEST STORIES [See All]