Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

War Reporting - A Veteran's Guide: Shot At, Seized By A Murderous Mo

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • War Reporting - A Veteran's Guide: Shot At, Seized By A Murderous Mo

    WAR REPORTING - A VETERAN'S GUIDE: SHOT AT, SEIZED BY A MURDEROUS MOB AND CHASED BY KIDNAPPERS...

    As part of our Voices in Danger campaign, Robert Fisk reveals how he
    lived to tell the tale - and why the world is becoming a more
    dangerous place

    ROBERT FISK

    http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/comment/war-reporting--a-veterans-guide-shot-at-seized-by-a-murderous-mob-and-chased-by-kidnappers-8601590.html
    Thursday 2 May 2013

    This article is part of the series Voices in Danger, which aims to
    highlight the plight of journalists working in difficult conditions
    around the world.

    Years ago, a colleague rang me for advice. She was being sent to
    Baghdad in advance of a US threat to attack Saddam Hussein's Iraq. But
    should she go? Were the dangers simply so great that she should not
    risk her life? I gave her the only advice I could - the decision was
    up to her, but she should remember one thing: she was going to
    Baghdad to report, not to die.

    That's what I said to myself last month when I headed back to Syria.

    I'm going there to report, not to die. I said this during the Lebanese
    civil war, during Israeli invasions, in the Algerian war of the 90s,
    in the Iran-Iraq war, in the 1991 liberation of Kuwait, in the 2003 US
    invasion of Iraq, in Bosnia and Serbia and in the Armenian-Karabach
    war. But is it really that simple?

    I used to ponder an interesting equation. If you drive fast when you
    are under shellfire, are you safer than if you drive slowly? The
    faster you go, the more places you can be hit. The slower, the fewer -
    but there's more time to be hit. Work that out. And here's another
    one: the more wars you cover, the more experienced you are in staying
    alive. But of course, the more wars you cover, the greater are the
    chances of being killed.

    When in 2001 I was beaten by a mob close to the Afghan border - and
    they were trying to kill me - I do remember asking myself how long it
    would take to die. Then I recalled a friend in civil war Lebanon who
    told me that when in trouble, "whatever you do, don't do nothing." And
    I bashed one of the attackers with my fist. I knocked his tooth out;
    the scar is still on the back of my hand. And it allowed enough time
    for a Muslim cleric to intervene and save me.

    But there are no set rules. Wearing a flak jacket is often good
    advice, though I remember a colleague who was killed because he was
    wearing one. The bullet penetrated his neck and then became trapped
    inside him by the steel jacket, revolving round and round until it had
    destroyed his torso. Besides, I don't like turning up on a street
    corner among dozens of unprotected civilians, the flak jacket sending
    a vicious message to every man and woman there: this man's life, this
    Westerner's life is more precious, more valuable than your miserable
    lives. So yes, I often prefer to wear my ordinary clothes, no flak
    jacket, no helmet, just merge in with the rest. Faster on my feet,
    too. Running with a cumbersome jacket on is not easy - though the
    foreign editors who insist that you wear it rarely discover this.

    But then again, back to the old question. Is it worth it? Every time I
    come back from a dangerous assignment, I do get that extraordinary
    feeling; that I got my story and came back alive. Churchill captured
    it quite well when he said that there was nothing so satisfying as
    being shot at without effect.

    But. I'll repeat that. But. But surely none of my colleagues who died
    reporting wars ever felt a premonition of their fate - or if they did,
    I don't recall them talking about it. Some, in Lebanon, I knew well.

    One was stabbed to death with an ice-pick. Several were killed by
    shells. One died in an air crash. Another either died from shrapnel
    wounds - or was shot to death as he lay wounded. We never found out.

    Another committed suicide after he had left the Middle East. And of
    course, their deaths are a warning to us all. Life is not cheap. Death
    is.

    A lot of journalists were killed at the start of the Bosnian war. Was
    this bad luck, the ferocious nature of the Bosnian war or because
    there were too many first-time war reporters covering the conflict? I
    fear a lot of the younger journalists who die arrive with only one
    experience of war: the cinema. And if you believe in movies, well, the
    hero usually survives, doesn't he? War is survivable after all. At the
    end, you just go home. Warning: you are not in the movies.

    Bouts of "hostile environment" courses might help. I'm not so sure. In
    Beirut in the late 1980s, when journalists were being abducted almost
    by the week, I adopted the Fisk method of staying free. Drive fast.

    And never, ever let them grab you. The one time they tried - a beaten
    up old car in Madame Curie Street, guns waved from the window - I was
    by immense good fortune recalling an interview I'd conducted that very
    morning with a Lebanese man who had been kidnapped. That was the
    moment their car tried to drive me off the road. So I pretended to
    slow down, then accelerated past them, crashed the front of their car
    and sped off through the streets. It took me several minutes before I
    realised they didn't know the area as well as I did. But I was sure I
    had been wounded. There was a film of moisture all over me. It was my
    own perspiration.

    The trouble is that being bombed from the air has always been my
    greatest danger in Lebanon - usually by those warriors of the Israeli
    air force in their attacks on civilian targets. Unfortunately,
    however, the lads and lasses running the 'hostile environment' courses
    generally don't tell you what to do in an Israeli air raid. Or, in
    Serbia, a NATO air raid. Odd, isn't it? I suspect that they see the
    Israelis and NATO as the 'good guys'. So they only train you to
    confront the horrible, generally Muslim 'bad guys' who might want to
    spirit you away for a few years - or kill you if their demands are not
    met. The Hizballah never touched me in Lebanon - mainly, I suspect,
    because I knew many of the kidnap gangs. So those courses - if they
    had existed then - wouldn't have been of much help.

    I also fear that we journos make too much of our own suffering. Not
    those who die. They are indeed 'our' martyrs. They belong to us. They
    remind the world that reporters should be honoured for their
    sacrifice. But I've also met a few who say they suffer from
    psychological problems. Quite possibly true. But I have an unhappy
    problem with journalists who have to 'come to terms' with what they
    see, who need 'closure' before they 'move on'. Because if they don't
    like covering wars, they can fly home business class with a glass of
    champagne before takeoff. The people who do suffer are the ordinary
    people whom we report on. They often have pariah passports, unable to
    flee their own land, fearing each day the death of their loved ones
    and themselves. No 'closure' for them, unless they die.

    For reporters - and those that work with them, drivers, fixers,
    translators - I fear that wars are becoming more lethal. Bombs are
    bigger, more destructive. More bullets fill the air. More and more
    precedents - the bombing and shelling of hospitals (Israel in Lebanon,
    NATO in Serbia, Syria in Syria), of whole civilian villages, of road
    bridges and shops and factories - mean there are fewer and fewer safe
    places for us to go. Most armies use civilians as 'human shields'. Not
    just the Hizballah but the Israelis too - why else did they hide their
    tanks beside homes in southern Lebanon during their five invasions of
    Lebanon? I even recall ringing the Lebanese army in 2006 and pleading
    with them to move an armoured vehicle seeking cover beneath a tree
    opposite my apartment block. They rightly paid no attention to my
    whinging. Soldiers - not civilians or reporters - come first in war.

    But yes, there is something we can do to make ourselves safer. Tell
    the world, repeatedly, that we are decent people, we journos, that
    recording the massacre of the innocent might lessen the chances of the
    next massacre, that talking to all sides is not an unworthy cause,
    that sometimes being neutral and unbiased on the side of those who
    suffer is also a good thing. When I started reporting wars in 1976, we
    were not targets. But we have become so. In Lebanon in 1983, a
    Palestinian gunman threw my press card onto the road because he no
    longer respected journalists. Then reporters became kidnap victims.

    Then targets for militia firearms - in Bosnia, especially - until a
    dead journo wasn't so unusual after all. Hardly a war now goes by
    without one of us dying. Or two. Or more. Think Iraq. Think Syria.

    Yes, I suppose it goes with the job. Reporters were killed in the
    Second World War. Richard Dimbleby survived a fire-bomb raid in a
    Lancaster over Hamburg but Ernie Pile was killed in the Pacific and an
    AP man who dropped behind enemy lines with US commandoes was executed
    by a German firing squad. Reporting wars is not romantic. It's awful.

    But at least we are witnesses. At least no-one can say afterwards: we
    didn't know, nobody told us.

Working...
X