Israeli officials described Gilad Schalit's first interview after his release as "exploitative." They could have added amateurish, propagandistic, opportunistic and downright cruel.The video I showed you before was from Euronews. Here's Israel's Channel 2's coverage of the interview with English subtitles.
Tuesday's travesty - carried live on state-run TV - was conducted by Shahira Amin, a leading Egyptian journalist who in February quit the channel for its skewed coverage of the popular protests that unseated president Hosni Mubarak. That Amin now appears to be doing Cairo's bidding bodes ill for hopes the "new Egypt" would usher in the first free media environment in the post-colonial Arab world.
The notion that Schalit agreed to give Nile TV an interview of his own free will beggars belief. Forcing him to do so immediately after his release from Gaza - before seeing medical staff, much less an Israeli representative or his family - is in itself an apparent breach of journalistic ethics.
That issue aside, more than a few of Amin's questions ran the gamut from fatuous to sadistic.
Let's go to the videotape.
JPost goes on to rip apart several of the interviewer's questions - it's worth reading the whole thing. But here's how they sum up:
Yonit Levi is the Channel 2 News presenter who throughout Tuesday's coverage waxed poetic over Schalit's every step, shunting aside the sensitivities of bereaved families or the thought that the lopsided prisoner exchange could spawn further acts of terrorism. In reacting to the Egyptian interview, however, she was spot-on: the "bizarre" spectacle, she said, "was borderline abusive."Indeed.
On his Twitter feed, Adel Abdel Ghafar, an Egyptian graduate student based in Australia, summed it up better still: "After 5 years in captivity, Schalit has to go through one last form of torture: an interview with Egyptian Public TV."
When Israel Radio reported this earlier today, they suggested that it had been staged in cooperation with Hamas and they noted that Shalit tried to get up and leave the interview several times but was prevented from doing so.