Guerrilla Journalism Strikes Again...Let's hear it for all the guerrilla
journalists out there who are scooping the big corporate media! An enterprising
web publisher posts photos of flag-draped coffins of the U.S. war dead -- images
banned by the Pentagon.
Yesterday I posted links to two stories and an
editorial published in The Seattle
Times about the firing of a woman who provided a
photograph of the flag-draped coffins of U.S. soldiers to the paper. The woman,
Tami Silicio, is not a professional photographer. Today another
non-professional, Russ Kick, owner of the website
The Memory
Hole, scooped the big corporate media
by posting Pentagon photos of the war dead after he had obtained them through
the Freedom of Information Act. News editors around the globe were taken aback.
They didn't know the Pentagon was taking those
pictures.
Below are links to three stories about these photos. The Pentagon is now trying to put the kibosh on release of the photos, which have now been published in newspapers and on websites around the globe. Way to go, Russ! From the New York Times: Pentagon Ban on Pictures of Dead Troops Is Broken By BILL CARTER Published: April 23, 2004 The Pentagon's ban on making images of dead soldiers' homecomings at military bases public was briefly relaxed yesterday, as hundreds of photographs of flag-draped coffins at Dover Air Force Base were released on the Internet by a Web site dedicated to combating government secrecy. The Web site, the Memory Hole, had filed a Freedom of Information Act request last year, seeking any pictures of coffins arriving from Iraq at the Dover base in Delaware, the destination for most of the bodies. The Pentagon yesterday labeled the Air Force Air Mobility Command's decision to grant the request a mistake, but news organizations quickly used a selection of the 361 images taken by Defense Department photographers. More here. From the Washington Post: Photos of Soldiers' Coffins Revive Controversy By Blaine Harden and Dana Milbank Washington Post Staff Writers Friday, April 23, 2004; Page A10 The Pentagon lost its tight control over the images of coffins returning from Iraq as about 350 such images were released under the Freedom of Information Act and a Seattle newspaper published a similar photo taken by a military contractor. After Dover Air Force Base, the main port for returning remains, released hundreds of government photos of the ceremonies, the Defense Department ordered yesterday that no more photographs be released. In addition, two employees for defense contractor Maytag Aircraft were fired after the Pentagon complained about a photo of flag-draped caskets taken by one of them that appeared in the Seattle Times. More here. From the Los Angeles Times: Photos of Coffins Draw U.S. Crackdown By Monte Morin, Times Staff Writer A website dedicated to publishing censored pictures and documents released dozens of photographs of coffins containing American war dead, which caused the Pentagon on Thursday to renew its ban on releasing such images to the media. Pictures of flag-draped coffins filling aircraft cargo bays and being unloaded by white-gloved soldiers were obtained by Russ Kick, a 1st Amendment activist in Tucson who won their release by filing a Freedom of Information Act request. Air Force officials initially denied the request but relented last week and sent him more than 350 pictures of Iraq war dead arriving at the military's largest mortuary at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware. The unexpected posting of the photos on the Internet caught the Pentagon by surprise and provoked a ripple of media attention to pictures the government had been trying to suppress. Several major newspapers planned to publish the newly released photos on their front pages today. Soon after the photographs were posted on the Web, the Department of Defense barred their further release to other media outlets, saying the photos violated the privacy of troops' families. More here. It's time the Pentagon started truly honoring our war dead by making them visible to the public. Here's a sample:
Posted: Fri - April 23, 2004 at 09:24 AM |
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My name is Georgia NeSmith. "Random Acts of Love" is my weblog, but I have numerous other websites you can link to through this blog. "Random Acts of Love" began in February, 2004, and I have been posting to it fairly steadily ever since, although there are a few months when illness and other issues have kept me away. I write about nearly everything under the sun. I also do a lot of photography and digital art and I teach journalism online. Recently I've also started posting videos to YouTube. When I am not doing that, I am trouble-shooting Mac computer issues. Oh, yeah. I also do a lot of community activism. (Can anyone say ADD? I call it AEG -- "attention excess gift.") I hope you enjoy reading what you find here, and that you will respond to the things you like (and argue with me over things you don't!). You can e-mail me directly from the "Feedback" link that is included with every post. This weblog is provided free of charge. However, if you like what you read here and want to ensure that it stays online, you can make a donation through PayPal below. Or you can go to my giftshop at CafePress.com and purchase my greeting cards, post cards, pillows, mugs, and soon posters and prints. You can also read samples of my creative work and see my photography and artwork on my creative website. Photo Albums and Website Menus
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