Ukraine invasion: How reporters’ bias creeps into news coverage

When Mahdis Keshavarz watched the Russian invasion of Ukraine unfold in the news last week, she almost immediately noticed a peculiar sense of astonishment pervading much of the coverage. 

Journalists on air and in print were expressing shock that a war like this could happen in a European city, using terms like “civilized,” “middle class,” and “they seem so like us.”

Why We Wrote This

The world has been stunned by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. But journalists’ on-air shock and empathy for the fleeing Ukrainians has led some to make comparisons that imply people in other parts of the world don’t deserve the same compassion.

“Journalists today are generally making an effort to be more inclusive in their reporting and learn how to represent people whose identity they don’t share more fully and honestly in the news,” says Sally Lehrman, chief executive of The Trust Project, an international consortium of news organizations. 

The expressions of shock coming from some reporters do, however, demonstrate certain “broken thought patterns that get in their way,” she says. “Think about the news images we normally see of war and human distress – they’re almost always showing Brown or Black faces. And we rarely see those Brown and Black faces showing joy, success, and accomplishment in the news unless they are held up as an exception.”

“This habit in news coverage reinforces the implicit bias that war and conflict somehow doesn’t ‘belong’ in the European context, Ms. Lehrman says. “So basically, we in journalism have a lot of work to do.” 

New York

When Mahdis Keshavarz watched the Russian invasion of Ukraine unfold in the news last week, she almost immediately noticed a peculiar sense of astonishment pervading much of the coverage. 

Journalists on air and in print were not only expressing shock that a war like this could happen in a European city, but also comparing it to conflicts in the Middle East in ways Ms. Keshavarz and others found deeply offensive.

One of the first instances came from CBS News senior foreign correspondent Charlie D’Agata, reporting from Kyiv: “But this isn’t a place, with all due respect, like Iraq or Afghanistan, that has seen conflict raging for decades. This is a relatively civilized, relatively European – I have to choose my words carefully, too – city, one where you wouldn’t expect that, or hope that it’s going to happen.” Mr. D’Agata has since expressed regret for his words, and apologized.

Why We Wrote This

The world has been stunned by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. But journalists’ on-air shock and empathy for the fleeing Ukrainians has led some to make comparisons that imply people in other parts of the world don’t deserve the same compassion.

“I spoke in a way I regret, and for that I’m sorry,” he said in a statement. “You should never compare conflicts anyway, each one is unique.”

A board member of the Arab and Middle Eastern Journalists Association (AMEJA), Ms. Keshavarz and others began to hear from members in newsrooms around the world, even as they witnessed journalists from the United Kingdom and France expressing a similar sense of shock that this could happen in a majority-white, European city. 


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