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Machismo Is Only One
Obstacle Women Face:
A
Colombian war reporter becomes involved with women's
issues
by Mar�a Cristina Caballero, Harvard Review
Winter 2001
In Colombia, the role of
the journalist has always been open to debate. Do we just report the daily
atrocities or try to find ways to stop them? Just reporting what goes on
in my country is perilous enough. Thirty-four journalists, men and women,
have been killed trying to do their jobs during the past decade; three were
killed this year [numbers based on research from the Committee to Protect
Journalists. Millions of Colombians have demonstrated in the streets, asking
for peace. And Media for Peace, a network of more than 100 journalists led
by Gloria de Castro, tries to influence reporters to write more balanced
accounts.
Of course, trying to point
to solutions can be a dangerous role for journalists, too. Many reporters
and editors have been forced to leave Colombia because of what they have
published. Still, despite the risks, I strongly believe that journalists
must not only expose injustices but also try to improve the situation of
countries as troubled as mine. When graduated from Bogot�'s Javeriana University
in 1984, I wrote "The Social Responsibility of the Journalist" as my thesis;
carrying out that mission remains my goal. As a journalist, I try to find
out from all of the factions what their perspectives are, no matter what
the personal danger might be. I've become accustomed to the risks and have
interviewed not only the leader of the right-wing paramilitary forces, but
also the military leader of the leftist FARC, the largest revolutionary force
in Colombia.
The Macho World of News
Reporting
There are many issues that
all journalists in Colombia confront, but there are also ones that are particular
to women who work in an environment often described as the macho world of
Latin American male-dominated media. New York Times correspondent Juan Forero
recently wrote that media in Colombia don't treat women very seriously: "Beauty
is a national obsession in Colombia, readily apparent on the nightly newscasts,
which often end with shots of bikini-clad young women." A week later, at
Colombia's national beauty pageant, 400 journalists were accredited to cover
it. In his article, Forero went on to observe that "it is clear when talking
to contestants that while winning is paramount, losing is not bad either.
After all, newscasts are stocked with former contestants."
Florence Thomas, a leading
professor at National University in Bogot�, regards such overwhelming media
attention for such an event as "humiliating." "For me," she says, "[the beauty
pageant] is like a horse fair." And attitudes that accompany such events
serve to undermine advancement of Colombian women in other fields; for example,
only 30 of the 263-member Congress are women, despite the fact that urban
Colombian women now attend universities in great numbers.
In this macho media environment,
it is perhaps not surprising that when I began working in journalism I did
not receive important reporting assignments. Those were tacitly reserved
for men. So I looked for key issues to write about and, progressively, I
became a very happy workaholic as I pursued my own investigations. When I
finished, I presented my material to top editors. At first, they were astonished,
but they grew accustomed to what I would produce and published my reports
that probed deep into the Colombian drug cartels, into institutional corruption
and the infiltration of drug money at the highest levels of government (more
than a dozen politicians went to jail), and into Colombia's violence and
human rights abuses.
"Are you crazy? Why do
you write about such dangerous issues?" relatives and friends would ask me.
Some wanted me to forget my idealism about using my journalistic skills to
try to help my country. Others strongly recommended that I lead a "normal" woman's
life and forget traveling to war zones. Their advice sounded like this: "What
kind of life is that of constantly receiving death threats?" "Why waste your
youth trying to understand the unsolvable problems of Colombia?" "Get married
and have lots of kids." "One of these days, they will kill you." I listened,
but it just didn't sound right to me to surrender. I repeated to myself that
I had to try. And the criticisms diminished as I began to win prestigious
awards for my reporting.
Yet, so many times I found
myself in troubling situations that today I think it is a miracle that I
am alive. Ambassador Swanee Hunt, the director of the Women and Public Policy
Program at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government, thinks that perhaps the
reason I was not killed on some of my dangerous assignments is that I am
a woman. In an article she wrote in Foreign Policy about her work with Inclusive Security: Women Waging Peace, she noted that when I traveled alone for eight hours into the
jungle to interview the paramilitary leader Casta�o, I went "where a man
could not go." She suggests that I looked like a "harmless woman" and therefore
was allowed to cross some boundaries. And my former boss at Semana magazine
said of me in Brill's Content, "She looks harmless and she has that sweet
little voice, but when she is interviewing, she is like a rottweiler. She
bites and she doesn't let go."
Though I always try to
look for the human side of stories, I don't think this perspective can be
exclusively categorized as being a woman's one. But, interestingly enough,
last year, 122 international women leaders in journalism, surveyed by the
International Women's Media Foundation (IWMF), overwhelmingly agreed that
women bring a different, more "human," perspective to the news: 92 percent
responded that their presence in the profession makes a difference in how
the news is covered.
While coverage of our nation's
conflict has been my primary goal, I also reported a 10-article series in
El Tiempo about the shortage of books. Two million Colombian children didn't
have the money to buy them. Ironically, in many rural regions, children have
more access to guns than to books. What followed was a two-year campaign
that I led in which 30 public and private institutions provided more than
two million books to poor students throughout the country.
Ongoing Struggles of
Women Journalists
I had to leave Colombia
in 1999 because of death threats and a gunman trying to kill me. Occasionally,
I return to war regions to try to show the complexity of the situation of
my country to an international audience, publishing articles and op-ed pieces
in The Boston Globe, The Miami Herald, and CNN.com, among others.
In the meantime, some women
colleagues, such as 27-year-old Jineth Bedoya, confront very difficult situations
in trying to do their jobs. On May 25, 2000, when she went to a Bogot� area
prison where she expected to interview a paramilitary leader, Bedoya was
kidnapped and raped. She was found in a garbage dump. In time, she returned
to her job, and she continues to report atrocities.
Earlier this year, a U.S.
State Department report on human rights dedicated a section to the situation
of Colombian women in which it states "rape and other acts of violence are
pervasive. Women face an increased threat of torture and sexual assault due
to the internal conflict." Unfortunately, violence inside their homes is
rising as well. Experts believe that 95 percent of all abuse against women
is never reported to authorities. Nor are such crimes generally covered by
the Colombian press. Many reporters are simply overwhelmed by the increasing
intensification of the nation's conflict in which 35,000 people have been
killed during the past decade. Recently, the situation has been getting worse
as extra-judicial executions and forced disappearances are becoming more
common. One Colombian is murdered every 20 minutes.
In this environment, Jineth
Bedoya's treatment received media attention because it was the first known
case of a journalist being tortured and raped by alleged sources. As an expression
of my support, I nominated her for the International Women's Media Foundation's
annual award, which she received. At the ceremony in October, she said that "this
award not only acknowledges the conditions for journalists in Colombia, but
hundreds of women who have suffered rape and humiliation like I have, but
who continue to live their lives."
According to the Committee
to Protect Journalists (CPJ), last year was devastating for Colombian journalists.
Seven were murdered for reasons possibly related to their work, including
two women. Mar�a Elena Salinas (a freelance journalist) was found dead on
February 20, 2000, in Antioquia, along with two members of a guerrilla group.
According to the CPJ, Salinas was investigating armed conflicts in the Antioquia
region at the time of her death. On July 4, Marisol Revelo Bar�n was killed
in Tumaco, a town in the southwestern part of Colombia. She had worked as
a news director for Radio Mira, an affiliate of the Caracol Radio network
in Tumaco, and as a local reporter for Teletumaco and Impacto television
channels. Others have received credible threats. Journalist Mireya �lvarez
Ram�rez says that 10 FARC members have threatened her. She is the owner of
a bimonthly newspaper La Palma en Facetas, operating in a town outside Bogot�.
The FARC ordered her to leave the country in 30 days; if she did not she
would be killed. In her newspaper, she often reported on guerrilla tactics
such as the forced recruitment of peasants.
Reflecting on the Status
of Women Journalists
Last year, I was invited
by the International Women's Media Foundation to participate in a closed-door
meeting in Washington and to become an active member of the organization.
Since then, I've become more aware of and interested in exploring the causes
of the gender inequalities in the media workplace and in seeking ways to
possibly overcome these situations. In a detailed survey presented last July
to the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) 24th Congress in Seoul,
South Korea, it was revealed that despite women comprising about 38 percent
of the worldwide work force in journalism, fewer than three percent of media
executive posts are held by women. The IFJ survey is the most comprehensive
of its kind, with answers from unions in 40 countries representing 300,000
journalists.
As a journalist who has
had the opportunity to be in management positions (as editor, adviser to
the director, and director of investigations of three of the most important
Colombian news organizations), these findings were very compelling. It is
important to take into account that not more than 50 years ago, journalism
used to be an almost exclusively male profession. According to the IFJ, even
in 1972 a brochure issued by the German Federal Employment Agency stated
that women lack the "sang-froid" and the analytical capacity needed to become
a journalist.
Today female journalists
still have to overcome similar barriers if they want to reach their potential.
According to IFJ and IWMF, some of these obstacles include stereotypic assumptions
and attitudes toward women, difficult work environments, and social and personal
obstacles. Also, during the mid-1990's, Media Watch did a survey that revealed
that most news stories showed women as victims, failed to provide women's
last names, and neglected to mention most women's professions. In a 1996
IWMF survey of women in 44 countries, 64 percent of respondents said they
believed that women are not portrayed accurately in the media. Some 67 percent
said the media ignore women leaders.
Such findings indicate
the importance of providing more coverage about women in positions of power
and of taking the lead in changing the readers' perception of women. According
to a UNESCO study in South America, women are 25 percent of the regional
media workforce, but are more likely to hold part-time jobs and to work in
administrative positions rather than editorial. When asked in a recent IWMF
survey about what would most benefit women journalists, respondents in Central
and South America said, "more women in leadership and management positions
in the media" (68 percent) and "meeting and networking with women journalists
in other Latin American countries" (57 percent).
After learning this information,
I accepted an invitation to become part of the advisory committee of the
IWMF Latin American Initiative. This will address the needs of women journalists
by providing them opportunities to gain skills they need (through training
programs) to be regarded and treated as competent professionals. And it will
enhance women's access to decision-making levels in critical numbers. In
May, we had a meeting in Ecuador to discuss proposals. We also had three
leadership training programs that involved 75 Latin American journalists
who remain in active contact through e-mail. In addition to a strong interest
in management training, participants said they wanted training in journalism
skills, specifically in investigative reporting and new technologies. Maureen
Bunyan, who heads this advisory committee, believes that "the news media
will not change in Latin America until there is a critical mass of women
working at all levels of the profession."
IWMF was launched in 1990
with the goal of strengthening the role of women in the news media worldwide,
based on the belief that no press is truly free unless women share an equal
voice. Perhaps male-dominated media executives should take into account the
interesting results of the Glass Ceiling Research Center's project, published
in November's Harvard Business Review. The center tracked the number of women
in high-ranking positions at 215 Fortune companies between 1980 and 1998
and compared their financial performance to industry medians. It determined
there is a strong correlation between a company's profits and the number
of female senior executives in its ranks. The author concludes that those
companies that are slow to move women into top executive positions might
pay a high price.
Two-thirds of women journalism
leaders who responded to a recent IWMF survey consider that women's presence
in the newsroom has far-reaching implications for news context, work environments,
and even the whole society. As Bogot� Professor Florence Thomas has observed, "The
advances of a country should be measured by the advances of its women." In
Colombia, and in Latin and South America, how women advance in journalism
will be a measuring tool well worth watching.
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