I think you would expect anyone to concentrate on the horror of something close to home: that doesn't mean other horrors are ignored. There is foulness going on all over the world - all over Africa, the Middle East, etc. Apart from anything else, there isn't time or space to give it all coverage daily.
Perhaps, perhaps not. Responsible journalists though, you'd think, would be reporting everything equally - it's an horrific event regardless of how far away it is, we're a global community these days, it's not like these things have no impact.
I can understand Beirut being relegated for the newer atrocity of Paris, but I can't understand the relative lack of coverage for it before Paris happened - that sense that it's important because it's happening to people like us reinforces the differences rather than emphasising the shared humanity.
We aren't going to fix this by highlighting differences, and although journalists might well claim that they aren't there to fix the problem but to report on them, their partial coverage is lending itself to the problem not the solution.
O.