The responsibility of local newspapers
I've said it before and will say it again today. Local and regional newspapers have to live and work in the 'village' they serve.
While it's easy for the nationals to concentrate on the extremities and fanaticism of the terror trial, and today they do, it is also selfish of them. They can march into our communities and cause their headline havoc, then creep off again to their wine bars in London.
Here in Birmingham we will reap what we sew, and so I am proud of the newsdesk's plans on today's coverage.
Yes, we can and will highlight the extremities that came out in the trial. The Birmingham Mail is a newspaper of record and it is important that people know the full story.
But we have gathered some great reaction from community leaders and the ordinary Alum Rock citizens that takes this story forward.
Mosque leaders insistent that they must visit all those convicted to 'get inside their heads' to build a better understanding of what drove them to their crimes. Hopefully to then spread this understanding and to deter others from following the same route.
Traders and residents telling the world that their inner city suburb is normal, that 'fanatics' are in a minority and that they want to work with the rest of Brum.
Largely indigenous authorites take heed.... we all need to get into the minds of our fellow citizens as well. Are their better ways we can integrate? Can the police learn a lesson or two from the way their raids are perceived amongst the Islamic community? Can we move forward together?
I hope so. The Birmingham Mail will certainly refrain from making easy headlines from this story. We must reflect the wider normality of our suburbs.
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Hear, hear! Talking of which, I can hear the Sikh community in Smethwick echoing your stance over the P.10 article "Sikh festival's mob violence".
One assumes that at the end of the trial you will be doing interviews with leaders of the Guru Nanak Gurdwara temple in the town in an effort to avoid giving the impression that Sikhs are violent mobsters and Smethwick has a smaller Neighbourhood Watch than Dodge City?
Might that, however, be a case of shutting the fable door after the source has bolted?
Hi there Reg! Welcome aboard. Interesting point, but while reflecting wider normality we do, of course, have to report on facts. The p10 article you refer to involved the stabbing of the former president of a Sikh temple during a Vaisakhi festival. I therefore find the headline factually accurate. That said, perhaps 'Mob violence at Sikh festival (or event to fit)' may have been a better order of words. Please do keep watching... happy to be kept on our toes. Ed.
Test
although i am no royalist,i must take issue with the editor about prince harrys removal from afganistan. he did not "retreat" back to safety he was removed because the media put his and his colleagues in lives in more danger than they already face