"Insurgents want their stories told" -- Associated Press
Little
Green Footballs links to a Poynter
Online press release here reproduced verbatim.
From JACK STOKES,
director of media relations, Associated Press: [This is a solicited letter
regarding Salon's "The
Associated Press 'insurgency.'"] Several brave Iraqi photographers
work for The Associated Press in places that only Iraqis can cover. Many are
covering the communities they live in where family and tribal relations give
them access that would not be available to Western photographers, or even
Iraqi photographers who are not from the area.
Insurgents want their stories told as much as other people and some are
willing to let Iraqi photographers take their pictures. It's important to
note, though, that the photographers are not "embedded" with the
insurgents. They do not have to swear allegiance or otherwise join up
philosophically with them just to take their pictures.
These comments bear on some of the questions raised in the post and
commentary at Haifa
Street. In this regard, one hopes it is not impertinent to ask whether a
photographer who does not "swear allegiance or otherwise join up
philosophically with them (insurgents)" can take their pictures. Mr. Stokes
might like to state whether the Associated Press photographer who took a
sequence of pictures of an execution on Haifa Street, Baghdad is one of these
"brave Iraqi photographers" to whom the insurgents are willing to
entrust their stories. If so, at what point did the "brave Iraqi"
photographer become aware that the story of the day was going to be the live
execution of two Iraqi election workers?
Just asking.
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