Journalists in Lebanon have demanded an apology from a senior US envoy after he told them to “act civilized” and not be “animalistic”.
As reporters shouted questions after the US delegation’s meeting with the Lebanese president, Joseph Aoun, on Tuesday, Tom Barrack, the US ambassador to Turkey and special envoy to Syria, stepped up to the podium in the packed room and said: “We’re going to have a different set of rules … please be quiet for a moment.
“The moment that this starts becoming chaotic, like animalistic, we’re gone,” he said.
“Act civilised, act kind, act tolerant, because this is the problem with what’s happening in the region,” added Barrack, who has recently been leading talks with Lebanese officials.
The Lebanese presidency in a statement on X expressed regret at “remarks made inadvertently from its podium by one of its guests”, affirming its appreciation for the journalists and media representatives.
The information minister, Paul Morcos, in a statement also expressed regret at the remarks “by a member of the foreign delegation towards media representatives at the presidential palace”.
The photojournalists’ syndicate called Barrack’s comments “a direct insult” that set “a serious and totally unacceptable precedent”.
In a statement, it demanded “an immediate and public apology”, rejecting attempts to “downplay the seriousness of what happened or let it pass without accountability”.
The press editors’ syndicate also called for “a public statement of apology” and floated a boycott of the envoy’s future visits and meetings.
The union of journalists in Lebanon said Barrack’s remarks were “a reflection of an unacceptable arrogance in dealing with the media” and also called for an official apology.
Ibrahim Musawi, a lawmaker from the Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah and head of parliament’s media committee, called the remarks “a blatant insult” and urged the government to “summon the US ambassador and reprimand her”.