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  • 6
    Jan
    2013
    12:15pm, EST

    Assad gives defiant speech as Syrian rebels edge closer to Damascus

    Louai Beshara / AFP - Getty Images

    People watch Syria's embattled President Bashar Assad making a public address on state-run Syrian TV on Jan. 6 in Damascus. In a rare speech, Assad denounced the opposition as 'slaves' of the West and called for a national dialogue conference to be followed by a referendum on a national charter and parliamentary elections.

    Speaking before an overwhelmingly supportive crowd that interrupted his speech with chants and rapturous applause several times, Syrian President Bashar Assad offered no concessions and even appeared to harden many of his positions. He rallied Syrians for "a war to defend the nation" and disparaged the prospect of negotiations. There was little to no acknowledgement that there are Syrians themselves who have taken up the fight.

    "We do not reject political dialogue ... but with whom should we hold a dialogue? With extremists who don't believe in any language but killing and terrorism?" Assad asked.

    -- Reported by NBC News and wire services

    Read the full story.

    In the midst of civil war, Syrian President Bashar Assad addressed the country Sunday for the first time since June. He said he would continue to fight violence, blaming the crisis in Syria on al-Qaida and other terrorist groups. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

     

    1 comment

    Excellent. There has been a huge conspiracy against Syria and USA, UK, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Turkey are some of the countries involved in it. They wanted a new puppet regime in Syria -- not an independent one like the current regime. And what we have seen in Syria is NOT a revolution but a terror …

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    Explore related topics: media, middle-east, syria, world-news, bashar-al-assad, damascus
  • 31
    Dec
    2012
    5:02pm, EST

    Reuters cameraman wounded by Syrian sniper

    Ahmed Jadallah / Reuters

    Ayman al-Sahili, a Reuters cameraman, receives first aid after he was shot in the leg by a sniper loyal to Syrian President Bashar el-Assad while filming on the front line in Syria's north city of Aleppo on Dec. 31.

    By Reuters

    A Reuters television cameraman was shot in the leg and wounded while filming on the front line in Syria's northern city of Aleppo on Monday.

    Ayman al-Sahili, a Libyan citizen working as part of a Reuters multi-media reporting team, was hit by a rifle bullet fired from a distance. He was treated in Syria and then driven across the border to Turkey. His injury was not life-threatening.

    The ambulance transporting Sahili to Turkey encountered an air strike in Aleppo and maneuvered into an alley until it was safe to continue the journey.

    Syria was by far the most dangerous country for journalists in 2012, with 28 killed there during the year according to the Committee to Protect Journalists, a watchdog group. Read the full story.

    Ahmed Jadallah / Reuters

    Ayman al-Sahili is carried on a stretcher after he was wounded by a sniper loyal to Syrian President Bashar el-Assad in Syria's north city of Aleppo on Dec. 31.

    Ahmed Jadallah / Reuters

    Ayman al-Sahili is carried away in Syria's north city of Aleppo on Dec. 31.

    Ahmed Jadallah / Reuters

    A Free Syrian Army fighter pulls a boy off the street as a sniper fires during fighting with forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar el-Assad in Aleppo city on Dec. 31.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Previously on PhotoBlog:

    • Israeli airstrike hits media building in Gaza, killing leading militant
    • Photographers join together to raise money for a fallen colleague
    • Three photojournalists killed as Mexico drug cartels target media
    • Colleagues mourn TV cameraman shot dead on Lebanon-Syria border
    • The work of photographer Remi Ochlik, killed in Syria
    • Attacks in Syria kill several, including French journalist

    Slideshow: Syria uprising

    Muhammed Muheisen / AP

    A look back at the violence that has overtaken the country

    Launch slideshow

     

    11 comments

    How could anyone possibly know who the "sniper" was "loyal to"? Call me skeptical, but I think this might just be the new "babies pulled from incubators" story....

    Show more
    Explore related topics: media, middle-east, reuters, journalist, syria, journalism, conflict, world-news
  • 15
    Nov
    2012
    11:48am, EST

    Stuck behind the scenes as China's leadership changes hands

    Clockwise from top left: Carlos Barria / Reuters, Ng Han Guan / AP, Alexander F. Yuan / AP, How Hwee Young / EPA

    Scenes from the corridors and anterooms of the Great Hall of the People during the 18th National Congress of the Communist Party of China.

    By Le Li, NBC News

    BEIJING — More than a thousand reporters turned up at the Great Hall of the People on Wednesday, expecting to cover the closing session of the Chinese Communist Party’s 18th Congress where the final leadership line-up would be revealed. But they soon discovered the election of the country's new leaders had ended before they had even entered the main conference hall.

    Instead, they heard about the results the same way everyone else did: from state news agency Xinhua.

    Xinhua live-blogged the event – both in Chinese on Sina Weibo and in English on Twitter, even though the latter is still blocked in China.  When the news agency posted a message that President Hu Jintao was casting a vote, the journalists were all stuck in the long corridors of the Great Hall of the People.

    Ed Jones / AFP - Getty Images

    Journalists wait in a corridor to be allowed access to the main hall during the closing ceremony of the Communist Party Congress on November 14, 2012.

    I was one of them. By then, we had been waiting for over 10 minutes. Most of the others had been in the Great Hall of the People for almost three hours, but I was in good spirits, joking with the journalists around me about when we'd be allowed in.

    When I saw Xinhua’s tweet announcing that Hu would be casting his vote, those feelings evaporated. There was nothing we could do – the line of reporters still wasn't moving. I could feel the temperature rising around me.

    China's communists pick country's new leader

    Clockwise from top left: Vincent Yu / AP, Wang Zhao / AFP - Getty Images, David Gray / Reuters, David Gray / Reuters

    Scenes from the Great Hall of the People during the 18th National Congress of the Communist Party of China.

    Xinhua started reporting that Vice-President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Keqiang had been elected as members of the Central Committee, the highest authority in the party. Although we had shuffled forward a bit, we were still outside the entrance to the main hall. Some journalists didn’t even bother to wait in line and sat around with the conference hall staff pouring themselves tea.   

    Le Li / NBC News

    Surrounded by tea cups, a reporter rests while waiting in the bowels of the Great Hall of the People.

    I tried posting the news on Weibo but the name “Xi Jinping” was blocked.

    “Was the previous Party Congress like this, too?” a man asked someone behind me.

    A woman replied, “No, I came here ten years ago. It was not like this at all.”

    I turned around and saw they were reporters for a local Chinese news website. “Can you tell me what’s different?” I asked.

    She took one look at my press pass and stopped talking. On my pass, it was clearly written in big Chinese characters: “USA.” She turned her head away.

    Carlos Barria / Reuters

    Security personnel sitting as they guard different areas of the Great Hall of the People.

    Communist Party's Congress grinds on amid widespread indifference in China

    I tried checking Weibo again but there were no updates from Xinhua. Instead, I heard a quarrel at the entrance. Some photographers were arguing with security guards who were trying to block the half-open entrance. One guard yelled, “No one is allowed to enter!”

    Eager to know what was going on, I pushed to the front of the line. Suddenly, the entrance opened and the grand, cavernous Great Hall of the People lay before us.

    Mark Ralston / AFP - Getty Images

    The closing ceremony of the Party Congress at the Great Hall of the People on November 14, 2012.

    From my distant vantage point, I aimed my camera at the stage and started madly snapping photos.

    But which one was Xi Jinping? All of the men were wearing the same clothes. The only person who stood out was Liu Yandong – a woman, and she was wearing bright blue.

    Yawns and other expressions of boredom as China's Communist Party Congress begins

    I looked at my phone and read Xinhua’s final tweets. “The voting concludes,” Xinhua said. “The new Central Committee of the Communist Party Congress and the new Central Commission for Discipline Inspection have been elected. The hall filled with great applause.”

    Le Li / NBC News

    Reporters taking pictures of cars parked in the courtyard of the Great Hall of the People.

    It was all over.

    All I had done was wait around in a corridor and take some pictures – along with every other journalist there. The best shot was of the courtyard, where more than 50 Audis were parked. Everyone else took the same photo and posted it on Twitter. The pictures were deleted within minutes, after netizens questioned why the Chinese leaders did not drive their own national brand, Red Flag.

    One blogger noticed a Lexus among the Audis and commented, “One is even Japanese brand.” 

    We might not have been able to report on the Chinese Communist Party’s 18th Congress, but at least we could prove that the Audi is the Chinese leadership’s car of choice.

    Read more about China on NBC's Behind the Wall

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    •Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

     

    Carlos Barria / Reuters

    Black Audi cars fill a parking lot inside the Great Hall of the People.

    13 comments

    "Great Hall of The People" Where apparently none of 'the people' knows what is going on.

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    Explore related topics: media, china, asia, beijing, world-news, featured, communist-party-congress
  • 11
    Sep
    2012
    8:41am, EDT

    An orchid takes center stage

    Chris Jackson / Getty Images

    Photographers take pictures of an orchid named in honor of Diana, Princess of Wales at Singapore Botanical Gardens ahead of a visit by Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge on September 11, 2012 in Singapore. The royal couple are on a Diamond Jubilee tour taking in Singapore, Malaysia, the Solomon Islands and the tiny Pacific Island of Tuvalu.

    Read about the Kimilsungia, an orchid named to honor another dynasty, in a previous post on PhotoBlog and see how the royal couple reacted to the plant in the video below.

    The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge -- aka Will and Kate -- arrive in Singapore, the first stop on their Southeast Asia tour, to view a special orchid named in honor of Princess Diana. NBC's Sara James reports.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

     

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: media, asia, royals, singapore, world-news, flower, orchid
  • 28
    May
    2012
    7:50am, EDT

    Heckler calls Tony Blair 'a war criminal' as former British PM appears at phone-hacking inquiry

    A protester (in white shirt) is tackled by security staff as he calls former British Prime Minister Tony Blair (seated at left) a "war criminal" during Blair's testimony to the Leveson Inquiry in London, England on May 28, 2012. Lord Leveson is seen standing at top right.

    Stefan Wermuth / Reuters

    Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair arrives to give evidence before the Leveson Inquiry on May 28, 2012.

    By Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com and NBC News — Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair was accused of being "a war criminal" by a heckler who burst into a court room during his testimony at a UK inquiry into media ethics Monday. 

    The protester shouted for Blair to be arrested - shortly before he was himself bundled away by security staff.

    Blair, who served as prime minister between 1997 and 2007, was the latest senior politican to appear at the investigation set up last year in the wake of a phone-hacking scandal when it emerged that reporters at the Rupert Murdoch-owned News of the World tabloid had routinely hacked into the phones of public figures. Read the full story.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

     

    Tom Stoddart / Getty Images Contributor, file

    Tony Blair is seen during the 1997 General Election campaign, when Rupert Murdoch's influential newspaper The Sun switched allegiances to back Blair's Labour party.

    Peter MacDiarmid / Getty Images

    Anti-war protesters gather outside The Royal Courts of Justice as former Prime Minister Tony Blair started to give evidence to the Leveson Inquiry on May 28, 2012 in London, England.

    Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair testified this morning about his close ties to media mogul Rupert Murdoch, who's News of the World tabloid is in the middle of a phone-hacking scandal. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

     

    1 comment

    Keep tracing this and you are going to have a list of the world power leaders. They are all connected to the UN and they are all going down. The problem is......what in the world is going to replace the pervs. I wonder if they masturbated when they heard phone sex....What a bunch of pervs.

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    Explore related topics: media, europe, protest, tony-blair, united-kingdom, world-news, leveson-inquiry
  • 21
    May
    2012
    5:51am, EDT

    Jeon Heon-kyun / EPA

    US envoy warns North Korea against nuclear 'provocation'

    Glyn Davies, center, U.S. special envoy for North Korea policy, speaks to the media after meeting with his South Korean and Japanese counterparts at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade in Seoul, South Korea, on May 21, 2012.

    "We are obviously in a bit of an uncertain period with North Korea", Davies told reporters. "It is very important that North Korea not miscalculate again and engage in any future provocation."

    2 comments

    Such a foolish country N. Korea is ....

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    Explore related topics: media, asia, diplomacy, north-korea, south-korea, world-news, glyn-davies
  • 14
    May
    2012
    10:09am, EDT

    Photographers join together to raise money for a fallen colleague

    Kate Brooks

    Dec. 2001: Pakistani militants are held in a makeshift prison after being captured for illegally entering Afghanistan. The Afghan authorities later released them on a Ramadan amnesty. This photo is one of several prints donated for a Christie's auction to raise funds of the family of photographer Anton Hammerl.

    Unai Aranzadi

    Freelance photographer Anton Hammerl working near Brega, Libya, April 1, 2011.

    By Phaedra Singelis, NBC News

    A little over a year ago, on April 5, 2011, South African photographer Anton Hammerl was killed in Libya, shot by forces loyal to Moammar Gadhafi during the fight for Brega, a key oil town on the coast. His body has still not been recovered.

    It was initially reported that Hammerl was captured and was being held by the Libyan government along with fellow journalists James Foley, Manu Brabo and Clare Morgana Gillis, who witnessed the shooting but weren’t able to report his death for 44 days while they were held captive.

    Foley and Gillis, who have both returned to Libya in search of his remains, believe they have traced his body in a mass grave, though it has not been positively identified or returned to his family. Due to the current chaos surrounding the current Libyan government and the tens of thousands still missing, getting DNA testing is complicated, but they hope that, with the support of the South African government, they will prevail and bring his body home.

    As a freelance photographer, Hammerl didn’t have the support of a publication behind him and didn’t have a life insurance policy. He leaves behind his wife, Penny Sukhraj, and three children, Aurora, 11, Neo, 8, and baby Hiro, 1.

    To help the family, a group of international journalists have organized a silent auction of contemporary photojournalism prints to be held at Christie’s on May 15 in New York City. It is the first sale at Christie’s to feature contemporary photojournalism exclusively.

    Lynsey Addario / VII

    A Bhutanese man walks through a forest in Rethung Gonpa village outside of Trashigang, in east Bhutan, August 8, 2007.

    Several lots of limited-edition, signed prints by some of the world’s leading photographers, such as Platon, David Hume Kennerly, David Alan Harvey, Bruce Davidson and Sebastião Salgado, will be offered. Some of the prints, which can be viewed online ahead of the auction, come with additional donations, such as a book or a meeting with the photographer. New York Times photographer Fred Conrad is auctioning off a portrait sitting along with a print.

    Foley and Gillis helped organize the auction with the support of photojournalist David Brabyn based on an idea from Peter Bouckaert of Human Rights Watch. “Anton’s death, unlike Tim (Hetherington) and Chris (Hondros), leaves behind two young children,” Bouckaert wrote on Facebook. “I am wondering if we can’t organize a common print auction where various photographers donate a favorite print.”

    Larry Fink

    Philadelphia, 1990

    With the help of Brabyn, they solicited photographers and built a website. But, deciding that wasn’t enough, they decided to approach a top auction house, eventually gaining the support of Christie’s auctioneer and senior vice president Lydia Fenet. CNN correspondent Christiane Amanpour will host the event and Hammerl’s widow will be in attendance. Those who cannot attend can submit an absentee bid or place a telephone bid. Additionally, there are ways to adopt a print, become a sponsor or make a donation.

    In addition to providing support for his family, the organization hopes to raise awareness about the dangers facing an increasing number of freelance journalists who work in perilous situations without the backing of a major news organization.

    Economic pressures and changes in the media landscape in recent years have resulted in fewer staff positions and an increase in journalists going it alone. In addition, assignments in areas of conflict have become more dangerous, in part due to increased anger at Western nations. The Newseum lists 70 journalists that lost their lives in 2011, and so far this year 21 more have died. According to the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists, 179 journalists were detained in 2011, a 20 percent increase over 2010 and the highest level since 1990. Hammerl’s name, along with 69 other journalists killed in 2011, will be added to the Journalists Memorial at the Newseum in Washington, D.C., during a ceremony on Monday, May 14.

     

    Ed Kashi / VII

    A young Kurdish boy enjoys some play time with found objects in his home in Kirkuk, Iraq on June 6, 2005. The boy's home is a camp for internally displaced Kurds at a former Kirkuk football stadium. After the overthrow of Saddam Hussein and the liberation of Iraq in 2003, many Kurds who had been forcibly removed from Kirkuk during Saddam's program of Arabization returned. There were no homes for them, so they set up camps in abandoned buildings, the football stadium and tents on the outskirts of this embattled city.

    Some of the photographers who donated prints spoke to msnbc.com about why they donated and described the dangers journalists have been facing in recent years.

    Ed Kashi, a New York-based freelance photographer and filmmaker represented by the VII Photo Agency, covers social and political issues and often works in hazardous locations. Winner of numerous awards and exhibited worldwide, Kashi has also produced seven books.

    Kashi says his print donation is a “reflection of his support for the brotherhood/sisterhood of the people who do this kind of work” and an acknowledgement of how much more dangerous it has become. “Just today (May 4, 2012), three journalists were killed in Mexico,” he said. He ascribes the growing toll in part to warfare where there is no front line and therefore no protection offered by being with one side or the other, In addition, he says, there is a growing perception, particularly in Muslim countries, that Western journalists are not neutral actors, thus creating a more treacherous and unpredictable atmosphere.

    Rather than working on spec, Kashi is often on assignment for publications such as National Geographic, which, he says, offers a journalist more security in the sense that it strengthens their “network of communication” should something happen. He says, though, that being willing to take risks is the “nature of the beast,” whether on assignment for a publication or not.

    For journalists who want to work on these kinds of stories, Kashi offers some advice: Build a strong network and line of communication. Set a specific time period to check in and communicate if you’re going to be delayed. Take a rigorous set of precautions, have a plan to get out and listen to your fixers and other people you are working with locally.

    Ron Haviv / VII

    A displaced Muslim girl takes up shelter at a destroyed mosque after fleeing a government offensive against the Tamil Tigers in Nanathan, Sri Lanka, September 2007.

    Ron Haviv, a New York-based freelancer and co-founder of the VII Photo Agency, has made a career covering conflict and humanitarian crises around the world. He has been on assignment for such publications as Fortune, The New Yorker, Paris Match and Time magazine, and has published books on Haiti, Afghanistan and the Balkans.

    Though Haviv never met Hammerl, he says he has been touched personally and professionally by his death and the increasing dangers journalists have been facing, describing the “powerful bond” among those who put their lives at risk.  Competition, he says, isn’t as important as getting the story out, and often they share food, logistics, and information.

    Haviv says that since the War on Terror began after 9/11, journalists’ deaths and injuries have been “eye-opening events for those more established photographers” like himself. The deaths of Anton Hammerl, Tim Hetherington, Chris Hondros, Remi Ochlik, Marie Colvin and Anthony Shadid in the last year also have created a new problem: Editors have pulled back coverage and have been reluctant to put photojournalists on assignment where they would become responsible for their safety.

    Though Haviv hasn’t stopped covering conflicts, recent events have made him more thoughtful about his methods. Early in his career he took a more “haphazard” approach, but is now planning on taking a refresher class in trauma first aid, among other precautions. Despite having covered the Balkan wars, where over 50 journalists were killed from 1991-1995, Haviv says the evolving dangers facing journalists today have taken things to a “whole new level.”

    Joao Silva

    Iraq: Kurmashia Marsh: February 18, 2004: A Marsh Arab poles his canoe through Kirmashiya Marsh in southern Iraq.

    Joao Silva, has been covering conflict since the violent uprising in South Africa in the 1990s as part of what is known as the “Bang Bang Club.” He met Hammerl during this time while they were both working at The Star, one of the most prestigious daily newspapers in South Africa.

    Silva was nearly killed in 2010 and lost both his legs when he stepped on a mine while accompanying soldiers on patrol in Afghanistan. “We’ve taken a big hit,” he says of the conflict photographers’ community, but he doesn’t think they should stop covering the stories. “We are the messenger,” he said. “If we’re not there, who will be?

    “We have a responsibility as journalists to be there. We have a role and a responsibility to society.”

    Silva was injured while on contract for The New York Times, but was not covered as a staff member. Soon after, though, the Times put him on staff and fought to keep him in the military hospital system, where he was cared for at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Bethesda, Md. “I was one of the lucky ones,” he says, “but Anton was a freelancer, and he didn’t have that support.”

    Joao Silva

    Malawi: Blantyre: June 29, 2005: At a prison in Malawi, inmates sleep on the floor, so tightly packed that they turn only when a designated prisoner wakes them to do so en masse.

    Silva hopes the auction will raise a lot of money. He donated two prints; one was taken in 2004 in Iraq and is one of the more peaceful images he made covering the conflict. It shows how Marsh Arabs reclaimed their way of life after Saddam Hussein was toppled from power. The other is from a Malawian prison in 2005 and depicts inhumane conditions. Silva said the scene reminded him of stories of the conditions aboard slave ships.  Read Silva’s talk at the Bronx Documentary Center about his experience.

    Donate or find out more about the auction at FriendsofAnton.org

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    6 comments

    These courageous photojournalists deserve the respect and gratitude of all for their dauntless dedication to their profession which serves as an antidote to the subterfuge and deceit of those in power by showing images/stories of what is really happening in the world.

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    Explore related topics: media, photography, world-news, us-news, featured, christies, anton-hammerl, print-auction
  • 11
    May
    2012
    7:13am, EDT

    Andy Rain / EPA

    The High Court is reflected in the car window of Rebekah Brooks, the former chief executive of News International, as she arrives to give evidence at the Leveson Inquiry into press ethics in London on May 11, 2012.

    All eyes on court as Murdoch confidante Rebekah Brooks lays bare ties to UK elite

    Reuters reports — British Prime Minister David Cameron was among top politicians who sent sympathetic messages to Rebekah Brooks when she was forced to resign as chief executive of Rupert Murdoch's U.K. newspaper group over phone-hacking, she told an inquiry on Friday.

    Tabloid editor got free horse from UK police force

    Brooks is a former editor of the News of the World, which Murdoch shut last July when it emerged its journalists had hacked into the voicemail of public figures and a murdered schoolgirl. She was appearing at a judicial inquiry into press ethics to answer questions about her friendships with British politicians.

    VIDEO: Brooks confirms Cameron ties amid scandal

    The Leveson Inquiry's lead lawyer, Robert Jay, cut straight to the chase as Brooks began her day-long testimony, pressing her for names of politicians who had expressed their sympathy when she was caught up in the hacking storm in July 2011. At first Brooks sought to evade the question, but eventually said:

    "I received some indirect messages from Number 10, Number 11, the Home Office, the Foreign Office." Numbers 10 and 11 Downing Street are the prime minister's and finance minister's offices respectively. Read the full story.

    6 comments

    The scoundrels commute back and forth across the pond..... http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/may/06/leveson-murdoch-cameron-brooks-privilege

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    Explore related topics: media, europe, united-kingdom, phone-hacking, rebekah-brooks, leveson-inquiry
  • 4
    May
    2012
    11:03am, EDT

    Three photojournalists killed as Mexico drug cartels target media

    AP

    Photographers Guillermo Luna Varela, left, and Gabriel Huge, right, were among four people found slain and dumped in plastic bags in a canal in Veracruz, Mexico on Thursday, May 3, 2012. A fellow journalist said Luna was Huge's nephew.

    Three photojournalists who worked the perilous crime beat in Mexico's violence-torn Veracruz state were among four people found dismembered and dumped in plastic bags in a canal Thursday, less than a week after a reporter for an investigative newsmagazine was found dead in her home in the state capital.

    The targeting of sources of independent information by two warring drug cartels threatens to add Veracruz to the growing list of Mexican states where fear snuffs out reporting on the drug war.

    Reuters

    Regina Martinez was found dead in the bathroom of her house in Xalapa on April 28, 2012.

    The bodies of photographers Guillermo Luna, Gabriel Huge and Esteban Rodriguez were discovered in the town of Boca del Rio along with that of Luna's girlfriend, Irasema Becerra.

    Regina Martinez, a correspondent for the national magazine Proceso, was found dead in her bathroom on Saturday with signs she had been beaten and strangled.

    The London-based press freedom group Article 19 said in a report last year that Luna, Varela and Rodriguez were among 13 Veracruz journalists who had fled their homes because of crime-related threats. 

    In total, more than 70 journalists have been murdered in Mexico in the last decade, according to the government-funded National Human Rights Commission. The latest grisly discovery came on World Press Freedom Day.

    -- The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Felix Marquez / AP

    Police remove from a canal plastic bags containing the dismembered bodies of four people in Boca del Rio, Veracruz, on May 3, 2012. The fourth victim was Guillermo Luna's girlfriend, Irasema Becerra, state prosecutors said.

     

    2 comments

    Drug Cartels Ignorant? I often wonder about the mentality of these Drug Lords and Dictators across the World. Their very actions bring to their door step the hatred of their government and the people.

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    Explore related topics: media, human-rights, mexico, americas, photography, world-news, press-freedom, veracruz
  • 10
    Apr
    2012
    7:42am, EDT

    Colleagues mourn TV cameraman shot dead on Lebanon-Syria border

    Nabil Mounzer / EPA

    Unidentified mourners grieve as the coffin of cameraman Ali Shaaban passes in front of the Al-Jadeed TV building ahead of his funeral in Beirut, Lebanon, on April 10, 2012. Shabaan was killed on Monday and two others were wounded when they came under fire from Syrian army soldiers while they were filming along the Lebanese-Syrian border.

    Anwar Amro / AFP - Getty Images

    Colleagues carry the coffin of Ali Shaaban outside his TV station's studios in Beirut on April 10, 2012 ahead of his funeral in his hometown Mayfadun, in southern Lebanon.

    Al-Jadeed TV via AFP - Getty Images

    A handout image grab made available by Al-Jadeed TV on April 10, 2012 shows the bullet-riddled car of the station's crew in the northern Lebanese city of Tripoli after it came under fire by the Syrian army while the team was reporting on the Lebanese-Syrian border.

    Reuters reports — Syrian soldiers shot dead a cameraman working for Lebanon's Al-Jadeed television channel on Monday near the border between the two countries, the television channel said.

    It said cameraman Ali Shaaban was on the Lebanese side of the frontier, in the northern Lebanese region of Wadi Khaled, when soldiers opened fire on a car carrying the Al-Jadeed crew.

    Shaaban's colleague Hussein Khreiss said the shooting occurred even though the crew had explained to the soldiers what they were doing. "We told our Syrian brothers ... that we are not military ... but they opened fire heavily on the car," the channel's website quoted him as saying. Read more.

    Related content:

    • Syrian troops shell Hama on cease-fire deadline day
    • Factbox: Journalists killed in Syrian unrest
    • The work of photographer Remi Ochlik, killed in Syria

     

     

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: media, lebanon, middle-east, syria, world-news, ali-shaaban
  • 22
    Mar
    2012
    5:54am, EDT

    Lionel Bonaventure / AFP - Getty Images

    Journalists wait as French policemen and firefighters and members of the RAID special police forces unit are still laying siege to the apartment block where Mohamed Merah, the man suspected of a series of deadly shootings, was holed up, on March 22, 2012 in Toulouse, southwestern France.

    World's media watches and waits as Toulouse standoff enters second day

    Updated at 5:40 a.m. ET: TOULOUSE, France -- Police have lost contact with a 24-year-old gunman suspected of killing seven people in the name of al-Qaida and there has been no sign of life from his apartment in southwestern France for 10 hours, a senior official said Thursday.

    More than a day after 300 police first surrounded the five-story building in a suburb of the city of Toulouse, Mohamed Merah, who has confessed to killing three soldiers, three Jewish children and a rabbi, had yet to give himself up. Read the full story.

    • See more photos related to the series of shootings in Toulouse

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: media, france, europe, shooting, crime, world-news, toulouse
  • 20
    Mar
    2012
    5:50am, EDT

    Oded Balilty / AP

    A man walks past an advertisement displayed on a main street in Tel Aviv, Israel, on March 19, 2012.

    New Israeli law bans underweight models in ads

    The Associated Press reports — A new Israeli law is trying to fight the spread of eating disorders by banning underweight models from local advertising and requiring publications to disclose when they use altered images to make women and men appear thinner.

    • Touchy subject: UK bans Julia Roberts ad over airbrushing

    The law, passed late Monday, appears to be the first attempt by any government to use legislation to take on a fashion industry accused of abetting eating disorders by idealizing extreme thinness. Read the full story.

    67 comments

    Great! Now maybe they should ban anyone who looks attractive (because it'll make ugly people feel bad about themselves), anyone with muscle tone (because it'll make couch potatoes feel bad about themselves), or anyone who looks like are desirable to be around (because it'll make introverts feel bad …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: media, israel, middle-east, women, advertising, model, sexual-politics, eating-disorder
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