240 likes | 420 Views
Pharos University In Alexandria Faculty of Mass communication. International Communication Week :6 Lecture :6 B y: Dr : Zenat Abou Shawish 2013 . Assessment. Agency Reuter .
E N D
Pharos University In Alexandria Faculty of Mass communication International Communication Week :6 Lecture :6 By: Dr: ZenatAbouShawish 2013
Assessment Agency Reuter
The Reuter agency was established in 1851 by Paul Julius Reuter in Britain at the London Royal Exchange. Paul Reuter worked at a book-publishing firm in Berlin and was involved in distributing radical pamphlets at the beginning of the Revolutions in 1848. These publications brought much attention to Reuter. He later developed a prototype news service in 1849 in which he used electric telegraphy and carrier pigeons. The Reuter's Telegram Company was later launched. The company initially covered commercial news, serving banks, brokerage houses, and business firms.
The first newspaper client to subscribe was the London Morning Advertiser in 1858. Newspaper subscriptions subsequently expanded.
Global media The first newspaper client to subscribe was the London Morning Advertiser in 1858.[3] Newspaper subscriptions subsequently expanded.
Over the years Reuter's agency has built a reputation in Europe and the rest of the world as the first to report news scoops from abroad. Reuters was the first to report Abraham Lincoln’s assassination among other major stories. Almost every major news outlet in the world currently subscribes to Reuters. Reuters operates in more than 200 cities in 94 countries in about 20 languages.
The last surviving member of the Reuters family founders, Marguerite, Baroness de Reuter, died at age 96 on 25 January 2009, after having suffered a series of strokes.
Reuters employs several thousand journalists, sometimes at the cost of their lives. In May 2000, Kurt Schork, an American reporter, was killed in an ambush while on assignment in Sierra Leone. In April and August 2003, news cameramen TarasProtsyuk and Mazen Dana were killed in separate incidents by U.S. troops in Iraq.
Global agencies In July 2007, Namir Noor-Eldeen and SaeedChmagh were killed when they were fired upon by a U.S. military Apache helicopter in Baghdad after having been mistakenly identified as carrying weapons
During 2004, cameramen AdlanKhasanov in Chechnya and DhiaNajim in Iraq were also killed. In April 2008, cameraman Fadel Shana was killed in the Gaza Strip after being hit by an Israeli tank using flechettes.
The first Reuters journalist to be taken hostage in action was Anthony Grey. Detained while covering China's Cultural Revolution in Peking in the late 1960s, it was said to be in response to the jailing of several Chinese journalists by the colonial British government of Hong Kong
He was considered to be the first political hostage of the modern age and was released after almost 2 years of solitary confinement. Awarded an OBE by the British Government in recognition of this, he went on to become a best-selling author.
Reuters has a strict policy toward upholding journalistic objectivity.[citation needed] This policy has caused comment on the possible insensitivity of its non-use of the word terrorist in reports, including the 11 September attacks.
Reuters has been careful to use the word terrorist only in quotes, whether quotations or scare quotes.
Reuters global news editor Stephen Jukes wrote, "We all know that one man's terrorist is another man's freedom fighter, and that Reuters upholds the principle that we do not use the word terrorist.
." The Washington Post media critic Howard Kurtz responded, “After the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing, and again after the attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon, Reuters allowed the events to be described as acts of terror. But as of last week, even that terminology is banned.
Reuters later apologised for this characterization of their policy,[10] although they maintained the policy itself.
The 20 September 2004 edition of The New York Times reported that the Reuters global managing editor, David A. Schlesinger, objected to Canadian newspapers' editing of Reuters articles by inserting the word terrorist, stating that "my goal is to protect our reporters and protect our editorial integrity."
However, when reporting the 7 July 2005 London bombings, the service reported, "Police said they suspected terrorists were behind the bombings
This line appeared to break with their previous policy and was also criticized
Reuters later clarified by pointing out they include the word "when we are quoting someone directly or in indirect speech," and the headline was an example of the latter
The news organisation has subsequently used "terrorist" without quotations when the article clarifies that it is someone else's words.
In 2011 the Journal of Applied Business Research published research by Henry I. Silverman, of Roosevelt University that concluded that "Reuters engages in systematically biased storytelling in favor of the Arabs/Palestinians." Reuters denied the allegations.