Kathleen Carroll, senior Vice President of AP: “I also know from 30 years of experience in this business that you can’t get competitive journalists [note that she doesn’t limit herself to AP photographers] to participate in the kind of (staging) experience that is being described.”
Anderson Cooper of CNN, via The Corner:
While on the Hezbollah side, it’s really interesting — I was in Beirut, and they took me on this sort of guided tour of the Hezbollah- controlled territories in southern Lebanon that were heavily bombed. They are much cruder, obviously. They don’t have the experience in this kind of thing. But they clearly want the story of civilian casualties out. That is their — what they’re heavily pushing, to the point where on this tour I was on, they were just making stuff up. They had six ambulances lined up in a row and said, OK, you know, they brought reporters there, they said you can talk to the ambulance drives. And then one by one, they told the ambulances to turn on their sirens and to zoom off, and people taking that picture would be reporting, I guess, the idea that these ambulances were zooming off to treat civilian casualties, when in fact, these ambulances were literally going back and forth down the street just for people to take pictures of them.
Looks to me like “competitive journalists” were participating in staging. [UPDATE: And if you look around the blogosphere, many bloggers are examining varioius Lebanon photos that show signs of staging.] I wonder if any news outlet actually ran these shots?
Now that the fraudulent photos at Reuters have been exposed, I hope Carroll and others take their heads of the sand, and not just regarding the Lebanon situation. From what I’ve read, a major problem seems to be reliance on local stringers who may sympathize with one side of a conflict, and who may face personal or familial consequences if they report something the local authorities don’t like. Local stringers also seem to have little supervision, while at the same time needing to get good “shots” and stories if they want to get paid, which creates incentives for cheating.
UPDATE: Strong evidence that “Green Helmet” staged photos for the media at Qana here. Via EU Referendum, Stern magazine credulously indentifies “Green Helmet” as an innocent rescue worker name Salam Daher. But he called himself “Abdel Qader” on Arabic t.v., and the footage linked above hardly suggests a typical rescue worker. The mystery deepens.