BEIRUT (AP)
-- Behind a veil of secrecy, at least 30 journalists have been kidnapped
or have disappeared in Syria - held and threatened with death by
extremists or taken captive by gangs seeking ransom.
The
widespread seizure of journalists is unprecedented, and has been
largely unreported by news organizations in the hope that keeping the
kidnappings out of public view may help to negotiate the captives'
release.
The New York-based Committee to
Protect Journalists says at least 30 journalists are being held and 52
have been killed since Syria's civil war began in early 2011. The group
also has documented at least 24 other journalists who disappeared
earlier this year but are now safe. In a report this week, Paris-based
Reporters Without Borders cited higher figures, saying at least 60 "news
providers" are detained and more than 110 have been killed.
The
discrepancy stems from varying definitions of what constitutes a
journalist because much of the reporting and news imagery coming out of
Syria is not from traditional professional journalists. Some of those
taken have been activists affiliated with the local "media offices" that
have sprouted up across opposition-held territory.
Only
10 of the international journalists currently held have been identified
publicly by their families or news organizations: four French citizens,
two Americans, one Jordanian, one Lebanese, one Spaniard and one
Mauritanian. The remaining missing are a combination of foreign and
Syrian journalists, some of whose names have not been publicly disclosed
due to security concerns.
Groups like the Committee to Protect Journalists are alarmed by the kidnappings.
While
withholding news of abductions is understandable in many cases,
especially with lives at stake, the organization says, this has also
served to mask the extent of the problem.
"Every
time a journalist enters Syria, they are effectively rolling the dice
on whether they're going to be abducted or not," said Jason Stern, a
researcher at CPJ.
Jihadi groups are believed
responsible for most kidnappings since the summer, but government-backed
militias, criminal gangs and rebels affiliated with the Western-backed
Free Syrian Army also have been involved with various motives.
By
discouraging even experienced journalists from traveling to Syria, the
kidnappings are diminishing the media's ability to provide unbiased
on-the-ground insights into one of the world's most brutal and
combustible conflicts.
And those who do go
into the country from outside appear often to be among the less-prepared
and less-protected - which in turn increases the chances of capture,
deepening the fears and compounding the problem.
The
kidnappings have helped shift the narrative of the war in a wider
sense: What might have at first seemed to many like an idealistic
rebellion against a despotic ruler now is increasingly viewed as a
chaotic affair in which both anti-Western extremists and criminal gangs
have gained dangerous influence
"It is vital
that journalists witness and tell the story of the Syrian civil war,"
said John Daniszewski, senior managing editor for international news at
The Associated Press. "However, the impunity with which journalists are
attacked and kidnapped in this conflict means that we must be doubly
cautious. It is not an arena for novices, and extreme care needs to be
exercised to obtain the news. At the same time, actors in the civil war
must acknowledge and protect the right of journalists to cover it fairly
and accurately as a basic human right."
The
spate of kidnappings has drawn comparisons to Lebanon during its vicious
1975-90 civil war, when Westerners, including then-AP Middle East
Correspondent Terry Anderson, were taken captive by Muslim extremists
and held for long periods.
In Iraq, 150
journalists were killed between the U.S. invasion in 2003 and the
departure of American troops in 2011 - a rate similar to the CPJ's
figures for Syria - but the numbers of abducted journalists was smaller.
Reporters Without Borders said it registered 93 kidnappings of
journalists there from 2003 to 2010 - a far lower rate than it found in
Syria. In Libya, a handful of journalists were detained during the war.
Stern said the kidnappings in Syria are unprecedented in scale: "Simply no other country comes close."
Addressing
the U.N. Security Council at a meeting in July, AP Executive Editor
Kathleen Carroll, vice chairwoman of the Committee to Protect
Journalists, said reporters serve as the public's eyes and ears in
conflict situations by going to places and asking questions that most
people cannot.
"An attack on a journalist is a
proxy for an attack on the ordinary citizen, an attack on that
citizen's right to information about their communities and their
institution" and their world, she said.
Richard
Engel, the chief foreign correspondent for U.S. television network NBC
who was kidnapped by pro-Assad militiamen in northern Syrian and held
for five days in December 2012, said journalists must reflect long and
hard before going to the country.
"Because
right now, if you go to into the rebel-held or contested areas in
northern and eastern Syria, there is a very sizable percentage that
you're not going to make it out alive," he said.
While
reporting in Syria has always been a dangerous business, the risk has
evolved during the uprising. Early on, President Bashar Assad's
government expelled foreign journalists covering anti-government
protests, including an AP team in Damascus. Scores of Syrian journalists
were imprisoned. As rebels began seizing territory, some rebel factions
began detaining journalists as well, often on unfounded accusations
that they were spies.
Abductions increased significantly in recent months, as extremist groups grew more powerful in some areas.
Most
kidnappings since the summer have taken place in rebel-held
territories, particularly in chaotic northern and eastern Syria, where
militant al-Qaida-linked groups hold influence. Among the most dangerous
places is the northeastern city of Raqqa, which was taken over by
al-Qaida militants shortly after it became the first city to fall
entirely into rebel hands; the eastern Deir el-Zour province; the border
town of Azaz, and the corridor leading to Aleppo, once a main route for
journalists going into Syria.
There are no
reliable estimates of how many journalists are held by the Syrian
government, which routinely rounds up writers, activists and reporters
who fail to toe the official line.
Local
journalists have taken the brunt of the violence. Of the 52 documented
by CPJ as killed, all but five were Syrian. Among the foreigners who
lost their lives covering battles were French TV reporter Gilles
Jacquier, French photographer Remi Ochlik, American journalist Marie
Colvin with Britain's Sunday Times and Japanese journalist Mika
Yamamoto.
Often the cases of abduction are not
reported by media organizations at the request of the families or
employers. News organizations on a case-by-case basis are inclined to
respect such requests, regardless of the identity of the person
abducted, if they are persuaded that publication would increase the
danger for the victim.
That, in turn, makes the extent of the problem less visible to the public.
Peter
Bouackert, emergency director at Human Rights Watch, said an unintended
consequence of such a blackout is that journalists may be less aware of
the dangers they face.
In some cases, rebels
acting as middle men have offered to "buy" hostages to use for their own
purposes, activists say. Unconfirmed reports say at least some
kidnappings are done to raise money for weapons.
In some cases, the captors are thought to be holding hostages for ransom, or as pawns for negotiations.
Experts
say religious extremists pose a particular danger because they kidnap
for ideological reasons, and are less likely to negotiate or yield to
foreign pressure.
Bouackert says almost all
kidnappings since the summer have involved al-Qaida-affiliated militants
and remain unresolved with no ransom demands or discussion about
releases.
"They are basically being held
hostage as insurance against any future Western intervention against
extreme jihadi groups," said Bouackert, who specializes in cases
involving missing journalists.
In published
accounts of their captivity, some freed journalists wrote of trusted
rebels and fixers who betrayed them, and of hard-core Islamic fighters
who psychologically and physically tortured them.
"At
first they kept accusing me of being a CIA agent, and in order to break
me pretended to execute me four times. At the end it was all about
money," said Jonathan Alpeyrie, a French-American photographer held in
northern Syria for 81 days by Islamic rebels until a benefactor paid
$450,000 on his behalf.
Alpeyrie, 34, has
reported from Afghanistan, Egypt, Libya, Pakistan and Somalia. He was
abducted on his third trip to Syria, apparently betrayed by a fixer. He
was freelancing for the New York-based agency Polaris Images when
kidnapped.
"I will never go back to Syria," he said.
Among
the longest-held captives are American freelance journalists Austin
Tice, missing since August 2012, and James Foley, who disappeared in
November 2012. Tice, who was one of few journalists reporting from
Damascus when he vanished, is suspected of being held by the Syrian
government, although his family has said they are uncertain who is
holding their son. There has been no information on Foley.
More
recent abductees include Spanish journalist Marc Marginedas, who has
not been seen since his car was stopped by armed jihadists on Sept. 4
near the western town of Hama, and French journalists Nicolas Henin,
Pierre Torres, Didier Francois and Edouard Elias - all missing since the
summer.
American freelance photographer
Matthew Schrier, who escaped in July from an Aleppo basement after seven
months in captivity, said his captors tortured him for his credit card
and bank passwords and used his money to shop on eBay.
Among
the most recent Syrian victims was Rami Razzouk, working for a Syrian
radio station that reports critically on al-Qaida-linked militants.
In
a harrowing account of his 152 days in Syrian rebel captivity, Italian
journalist Domenico Quirico wrote in the daily La Stampa of a revolution
gone astray.
"In Syria, I discovered the Land of Evil," he wrote.
---
Associated Press writer Verena Dobnik in New York City contributed to this report.
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