Tampilkan postingan dengan label media coverage of war. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label media coverage of war. Tampilkan semua postingan

Minggu, 19 Oktober 2014

A Look At How News Organziations Are Trying To Cover The Islamic State

A photographer takes pictures of U.S.-led coalition aircraft over Kobani, Syria, where airstrikes are intended to give residents time to organize against Islamic State militants. (Kai Pfaffenbach/Reuters)

How To Cover The Islamic State — And Survive -- Joel Simon, Washington Post

Sometime in 2013, as Islamic State militants expanded the territory under their control, an order came down to the local brigades: Grab any non-Muslim foreigner you can find. Western journalists became prime targets, and over the next few months dozens were captured by local fighters.

International news organizations purposely avoided covering the kidnappings. Such blackouts are intended to create space for hostage negotiations to move forward discreetly, undisturbed by the media spotlight. Yet this voluntary censorship also had unintended consequences: In late 2013, when 30 journalists were missing in Syria, there was virtually no coverage of the problem, little public awareness that Islamic State fighters were actively searching for journalists and humanitarian workers to abduct, and less recognition of the rise of a group that has now emerged as a serious international security threat.

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My Comment: If I was the head of a news organization .... I would definitely not send a reporter into Syria under any circumstances .... it has become too dangerous. At the start of the Syrian war I was able to gain the confidence of a few Syrian bloggers and video bloggers who were covering the civil war .... a small independent group of about 20 who worked together as well keeping tabs on each other in case someone found themselves in trouble and needed help to publicize their plight. Unfortunately .... this was not enough. Within a year most were either killed or imprisoned .... and the survivors made the decision to flee the country.

Kamis, 28 Agustus 2014

Russian Media Is Slowly Starting To Report That Russia Has Invaded Ukraine

The story has been missing from the front pages of Russian papers but is prominent in Ukrainian publications.

Russian Media Report 'Invasion Of Ukraine' -- BBC

Reports that Russian troops are intervening directly in the fighting in south-east Ukraine have started to appear in Russian media, despite repeated denials from the Kremlin.

Newspapers and websites are quoting mainly Ukrainian and Western media reports about a Russian invasion, but some have also started to ask whether Moscow is now "fighting a war".

Many Russian social media users, however, say they have no doubt that Ukraine has been "attacked".

They echo sentiments in the Ukrainian twitter-sphere where #russiainvadesukraine, #StopPutin, and #UkraineUnderAttack have become the top trending hashtags.

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My Comment: I have been seeing and reading the same Russian reports. But while Russian news media is slow in it's coverage .... Russian and Ukrainian social media is now abuzz with nonstop reporting/commentary/pictures/etc. of Russian forces battling Ukrainian forces throughout eastern Ukraine.

Sabtu, 16 Agustus 2014

How Photographs Can Change U.S. Military Policy

 

The Power of a Photograph -- A.J. McCarthy and Chris Wade, Slate 

A snapshot that changed United States military policy. Slate has partnered with Brooklyn Brewery and RISC to bring its hit war correspondent interview series to our readers. In this third installment, Steve Hindy, founder of Brooklyn Brewery and a former Associated Press foreign correspondent, sits down with three of the people closest to Chris Hondros, the Pulitzer Prize-nominated photojournalist who was killed in Misrata, Libya in 2011. Testament, a collection of Hondros' photography and writing, was released posthumously this year.

On Jan. 18, 2005 in Tal Afar, Iraq, a car approached an American patrol on a dark street after curfew, spooking a unit already on high alert. Warning shots were fired to no avail, and, when the driver failed to slow down, the unit opened fire. The two passengers in the front of the car—a civilian mother and father—were killed instantly. In the back were six children, one of whom was badly wounded. It was a family, not insurgents, in the vehicle. Hondros—who had been embedded with the unit and was out on the patrol—captured the complete events on camera, providing heartbreaking images of the tragedy for the world to see. In the clip above, Sandy Ciric and Todd Heisler relay the events of that night, and discuss the tremendous impact that those now-famous pictures had on the lives of those involved, and on military policy in Iraq in general.

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My Comment: Heartbreaking. No happy endings in this story.