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Home > Reporting, Writing & Editing
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2:55 PM  Mar. 31, 2006
Safety and Story: A Balancing Act
By Poynter Institute (More articles by this author)
Contributors: Larry Larsen, Al Tompkins, Roy Clark, Jill Geisler, Tori Marlan

More in this series

ON THIS PAGE

• A voice from Iraq: "Happiness doesn't need to talk" Roy Peter Clark and a letter from an Iraqi woman

• Looking back: Roy Peter Clark on journalism in times of crisis

• Coverage resources from "Al's Morning Meeting" writer Al Tompkins

• When coverage gets personal: Jill Geisler talks with Rajiv Chandrasekaran, a friend of Jill Carroll's and a Washington Post editor

Journalist Jill Carroll has spent her time in Iraq as a reporter, a hostage and now a free woman.

As the story of her capture and release moves to the stage of inquiry, a larger story looms for journalists to explore. 

It's a story of risk, safety and democracy. Of relationships between news organizations and reporters, freelancers and their contractors.

The picture of the fresh, bespectacled young woman smiling beneath a black headscarf -- and, later, that same face, sans headscarf and glasses, pleading for her own life on a grainy video screen -- has come to personify the struggle American newspapers and their journalists face as they report from war zones and dangerous places around the world.

It's an old story. Reporters have been going into war zones for millennia, since Josephus wrote about the brutal Roman siege of Jerusalem in A.D. 70.

For newspapers whose mission it is to bring their readers independent coverage of conflict and crisis abroad and at home, it's question with life-and-death implications.

jill carroll
AP
Jill Carroll after her release.
Jill Carroll is one of hundreds -- perhaps thousands? -- of journalists who work in places where most outsiders dare not go. War zones. Regions plagued by instability. Places of genocide, disease and poverty. Sites of natural disasters and their disquieting aftermaths.

Carroll's experience offers journalists an opportunity to think more broadly about the promise and risk that come with such coverage.

How should newsrooms weigh the risks of sending reporters into dangerous locations against the public's need to know?
BEYOND WORDS

Click here to view "Beyond Words: Photographers of War," the NPPA 2006 Judges' Choice winner
by Greg Kelly and Eric Foss of CBC. (Flash 8 Player required)


How do journalists reconcile the tension between safety and story? Between personal mission and naοve ambition?

What questions should freelancers ask before they begin their work with a news organization?

And how can journalists cover this story within their own newsrooms?

We hope to answer some of these questions on Poynter Online. We'll be adding stories throughout the day, so check in with us later for more. If you have other suggestions, or would like to add your own experiences, click here to join us in the conversation.
 -- Meg Martin, Naughton Fellow



A VOICE FROM IRAQ: "HAPPINESS DOESN'T NEED TO TALK"


roy
On the day that Jill Carroll was released, I received a message from another woman in Iraq. I met her a few years ago while she toured the United States with a group of Iraqi journalists. In the time since our introduction, we have corresponded, and I have been inspired, time and again, with her hope and enthusiasm for the future of her country.

Until now.

Today's message is much darker. Full of despair, yet somehow imbued with a profound humanity, a moving portrait of what it means to be surrounded by war. Because she may be vulnerable, I will not use her name, but it is known to my editor. (I've also corrected some of the spelling.) It occurs to me that my Iraqi friend is the kind of person Jill Carroll has been trying to reach, and whose voice needs to be heard.

Her letter:
Hi my dear Roy,

I tried to be hopeful in spite of all miserable circumstances. Where there is a hope, there is a way. I am still alive. Believe me, I want to die. I want rest and silence. Don't feel sorry for me, it is just talk with myself. I need someone to hear my thoughts. I want a close friend to share [with] me these sad feelings. Happiness doesn't need to talk.

Click here to read the rest of the Iraqi woman's letter.

   -- Roy Peter Clark, vice president and senior scholar
Posted: 12:28 p.m. March 31, 2006



LOOKING BACK: JOURNALISM IN TIMES OF CONFLICT


roy
The release of Jill Carroll leaves me jubilant and prayerful. As Anne Lamott once wrote, there are really only two prayers.  One is "help, help, help," the other is "thank you, thank you, thank you."
 
RELATED POYNTER RESOURCES

• "When One of Your Own is Hurt," by Jill Geisler

• "Journalists and Trauma: Secondary Victims," by Bob Steele

• "Reporting the Iraq War," by David Shedden

• "Iraq Coverage Resources," by Poynter Online

• "Readers' Iraq Tips," by Jon Dube

• "Boning Up for the War in Iraq," by Anne Van Wagener

• "Covering the Iraq Crisis," by Sree Sreenivasan

After jubilance and prayer comes reflection, a time to think once again of the role of the press in times of emergency and war. Many of us here at Poynter wrote about these issues in the immediate aftermath of Sep. 11,  2001, and during the buildup to the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. I've dusted off a handful of my columns to share with you now.
 
"How to cover the big, big story," is a reminder that we have inherited many of the strategies we use to cover great wars and catastrophes, especially when the eyewitness is vulnerable to the dangers he or she is covering.
 
"Truthful propaganda" makes a controversial claim that journalists -- even in a democracy -- play a necessary role in support of a nation's efforts in wartime.
 
"The invisible uniform" argues that the patriotism of journalists is not expressed by flag decals or lapel pins. Instead, it is expressed by moral and physical courage -- such as Jill Carroll's -- a sense of democratic duty to find the real story.
 
"The post-traumatic press" recognizes that the experience of war and terrorism can traumatize individuals, families, towns, an entire nation, and that journalists have a role to play in relieving panic and placing risks in context.
 
Finally, "Should journalists protect their own?" defines the tension that exists when journalists, like Jill Carroll, became part of the story. 

 -- Roy Peter Clark, vice president and senior scholar
Posted: 4:34 p.m. March 30, 2006




ADDITIONAL RESOURCES

Standing Searches:
• Jill Carroll update blog on CSMonitor.com
• Jill Carroll stories on Poynter.org
• Jill Carroll articles by CSMonitor.com
• Articles by Jill Carroll
• Jill Carroll strories from Google News

Statements:
•
From The Christian Science Monitor's Publisher
• From The Christian Science Monitor's Editor

COVERAGE RESOURCES FROM "AL'S MORNING MEETING"

al
Below are some early resources that you can use as you cover the story of Jill Carroll's release, from Al Tompkins, author of "Al's Morning Meeting." For more resources and story ideas, check out previous columns here.

Three months after she was kidnapped, Christian Science Monitor freelancer Jill Carroll's captors released her. Carroll has also had her work from Iraq published in the American Journalism Review, U.S. News & World Report,  the Italian news agency ANSA, the San Francisco Chronicle, and other U.S. dailies. She had previously worked as a reporter for The Jordan Times in Amman. She was interviewed several times by National Public Radio.  The Monitor said the release was not the result of negotiations. She is the fourth Western hostage to be released in the last eight days.

Her abduction is a reminder of the dangerous work journalists are performing in Iraq. Here is a list of journalists from around the world who have died in Iraq.

Jill Carroll joins 38 other journalists who have been kidnapped in Iraq. Click here to get background information on the other cases.

The Committee to Protect Journalists provides this analysis of just how dangerous Iraq is for journalists, with this analysis of journalist deaths so far:
By Year:
By Nationality:
  • Iraqi: 48
  • European: 9
  • Other Arab countries: 3
  • United States: 2
  • All other countries: 5
By Gender:
  • Men: 61
  • Women: 6
By Circumstance:
  • Murder: 34
  • Crossfire or other acts of war: 33
Responsibility:
  • Insurgent action: 42 (Includes crossfire, suicide bombings, and murders.)
  • U.S. fire: 14 (CPJ has not found evidence to conclude that U.S. troops targeted journalists in these cases. While the cases are classified as crossfire, CPJ continues to investigate.)
  • Iraqi armed forces, during U.S. invasion: 3 (All are crossfire or acts of war.)
  • Source unconfirmed: 8
By Job:
  • Photojournalists: 21 (Includes still photographers and camera operators.)
  • Reporters and editors: 35
  • Producers: 7
  • Technicians: 4
By Location:
  • Anbar province (Fallujah, Ramadi): 4
  • Nineveh province (Mosul): 11
  • Baghdad province: 33
  • Saleheddin province (Samara): 4
  • Basrah province: 3
  • Diyala province (Baqubah): 2
  • Arbil province: 6
  • Karbala province: 1
  • Najaf province: 1
  • Sulaymaniya province: 1
  • Unclear: 1
By embedded status:
  • Embedded: 4
  • Non-Embedded or "unilateral": 63
Type of news organization:
  • Working for international news organization: 34
  • Working for Iraqi news organization: 33
Highest death tolls among news organization:
  • Iraq Media Network (includes Al-Iraqiya, its affiliates, and Sabah newspaper): 9
  • Al-Arabiya: 6
  • Reuters: 4
  • Kurdistan TV 4 

 -- Al Tompkins, broadcast group leader, "Al's Morning Meeting"
Posted: 12:17 p.m. March 30, 2006



RAJIV CHANDRASEKARAN: WHEN COVERAGE GETS PERSONAL

jill
At The Washington Post, Rajiv Chandrasekaran, AME of the Continuous News Desk, has spent part of Thursday being interviewed by other media about Jill Carroll.

He calls her "a good friend," someone he met back in 2002 when he served as Baghdad bureau chief for the Post and Carroll was a stringer there.

CSM Audio Report

Listen to The Christian Science Monitor's podcast report of Jill Carroll's release.

I asked how he handled his role as an editor of this ongoing story -- covering someone he knows well.  Did it pose ethical challenges for him? He thought not, because, he said, it was "not a story so controversial that one needs to recuse oneself because of knowing the person involved." Chandrasekaran said he was not a party to priveleged information, and didn't interact with Carroll's family during her captivity.

When interviewed about her, he confines his comments to her work as a journalist and the working conditions for journalists in Iraq. He felt his role was to provide perspective only.

The Carroll story broke on the same day The Washington Post launched its own radio station, WTWP. Chandrasekaran, whose normal duties involve guiding Post news stories to the WashingtonPost.com site, was interviewed at length on the radio, while simultaneously working on content for the Web site. At one point while I talked with him, he fielded calls from CNN, which was arranging to interview him on prime time tonight.
   
-- Jill Geisler, leadership & management group leader, from the newsroom of The Washington Post
Posted: 12:17 p.m. March 30, 2006


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