 |  | 

WILMINGTON NEWS JOURNAL
August 5, 2001
by John Sweeney, Public Editor
No matter how much care is taken to make sure the information in a
newspaper is as accurate and complete as possible, mistakes slip
through. The mistake may be as simple as failing to follow up on a news
item that's 2 inches long.
On July 12 a brief item from the Associated Press reported that a
Palestinian woman gave birth to a baby boy, who died. Doctors told the
reporter that Israeli soldiers prevented the mother from getting to a
medical
clinic on time, thereby causing the baby's death. The soldiers
supposedly
delayed the woman's car at a security checkpoint for a long time. The
report quoted Israeli spokesmen as saying the claim was unfounded.
Newspapers throughout the United States picked up the story. Some ran
the story with a large headline. The News Journal ran it as a tersely
written
brief, stripping out names and
details.
However, a reader noted, The News Journal and other
newspapers failed to report the follow-up story. The next day
the Associated Press reported that the Palestinian woman's
family denied Israeli soldiers caused or contributed to the
baby's death. According to the woman's father, the soldiers
waved their car through the checkpoint when they were told of
the emergency. The baby died later.
The reader, Jack E. Shattuck of Claymont, criticized The News
Journal. "After giving prominent coverage to the initial
false report, it would be in keeping with appropriate
journalistic standards to have given equal coverage to the
corrected follow-up report.
"The News Journal", he added, "gives such limited coverage to
international, and for that matter, national news as it is,
it should at least screen for any updates in the next few
days to correct such distortions as may occur."
Shattuck is right.
The late historian Barbara Tuchman once warned researchers to
be wary of newpaper accounts from troubled or warring
nations. "It is absolutely essential", she wrote, to take
nothing from a newspaper without following the story through
several days or until it disappears from the news."
Contemporary readers also could benefit from her caution. In
this case, the Associated Press followed up on this story.
The News Journal should have followed it too.
|
|