To view links or images in this forum your post count must be 3 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.
“Stephen Farrell, a New York Times reporter held captive by militants in northern Afghanistan, was freed in a military commando raid early Wednesday, but his Afghan interpreter was killed during the rescue effort.”
In what one can view as a lack of compassion for their man’s rescuers, and what I as a former Newspaper editor would view as an error in writing the lead, four paragraphs down in this story one learns…
“A British commando was killed in the raid, a senior allied official in Afghanistan said.”
Farrell was working independently. He was not embedded with any military unit. He knew the risks quite well. He was in 2004 kidnapped while working in Iraq.
NATO and the US military should adopt a policy that if journalists or other foreigners are kidnapped in a combat zone while working independantly – that no extraordinary military effort will be made to rescue them. Sorry but soldiers should not have to be asked to sacrifice their lives to rescue reporters who are out working on their own.
I really hope Farrell and the New York Times not only “thank” the dead soldier’s surviving family members – but that they also give his survivors enough money so that they never have to work again the rest of their lives.
They are owed so much more than that -- but it would be a start.
Farrell has shown he is not capable of making good judgment calls where his personal security and that of other journalists with him are concerned.
It is not realistic for Farrell or any journalists to expect the military to save them when they operate on their own and things go bad.
Reporters and thenews organization who employ them must be made to know that when they work on their own --they are on their own. If the host country allows them to hire private armed security etc., then more power to them. Soldiers should not have to die to rescue reporters. Especially reporters with a history of getting themselves kidnapped like Farrell.
Also worth commenting, most reporters try to be "objective" an impossibility. Many reporters in war zanes view themselves not so much as citizens of the US, Britain, what have you -- but as Journalists first and foremost...yet these same journalists fully expect their nations' military and government to do all they can -- up to and including sacrificing soldiers' lives -- to save them when things go bad.
....sneaking into North Korea is not exactly a smart idea either.


Reply With Quote


Bookmarks