Posted on 08/01/2006 2:03:55 PM PDT by Brian Mosely
NEW YORK (AP) Three news agencies on Tuesday rejected challenges to the veracity of photographs of bodies taken in the aftermath of an Israeli airstrike in Lebanon, strongly denying that the images were staged.
Photographers from The Associated Press, Reuters and Agence France-Presse all covered rescue operations Sunday in Qana, where 56 Lebanese were killed. Many of their photos depicted rescue workers carrying dead children.
A British Web site, the EU Referendum blog, built an argument that chicanery may have been involved by citing time stamps that went with captions of the photographs.
For example, the Web site draws attention to a photo by APs Lefteris Pitarakis time stamped 7:21 a.m., showing a dead girl in an ambulance. Another picture, stamped 10:25 a.m. and taken by APs Mohammed Zaatari, shows the same girl being loaded onto the ambulance. In a third, by AP photographer Nasser Nasser and stamped 10:44 a.m., a rescue worker carries the girl with no ambulance nearby.
The site suggests these events were staged for effect, a criticism echoed by talk show host Rush Limbaugh when he directed listeners to the blog on Monday.
These photographers are obviously willing to participate in propaganda, Limbaugh said. They know exactly whats being done, all these photos, bringing the bodies out of the rubble, posing them for the cameras, its all staged. Every bit of it is staged and the still photographers know it.
The AP said information from its photo editors showed the events were not staged, and that the time stamps could be misleading for several reasons, including that web sites can use such stamps to show when pictures are posted, not taken. An AFP executive said he was stunned to be questioned about it. Reuters, in a statement, said it categorically rejects any such suggestion.
Its hard to imagine how someone sitting in an air-conditioned office or broadcast studio many thousands of miles from the scene can decide what occurred on the ground with any degree of accuracy, said Kathleen Carroll, APs senior vice president and executive editor.
Carroll said in addition to personally speaking with photo editors, I also know from 30 years of experience in this business that you cant get competitive journalists to participate in the kind of (staging) experience that is being described.
Photographers are experienced in recognizing when someone is trying to stage something for their benefit, she said.
Do you really think these people would risk their lives under Israeli shelling to set up a digging ceremony for dead Lebanese kids? asked Patrick Baz, Mideast photo director for AFP. Im totally stunned by first the question, and I cant imagine that somebody would think something like that would have happened.
The AP had three different photographers there who werent always aware of what the others were doing, and filed their images to editors separately, said Santiago Lyon, director of photography.
There are also several reasons not to draw conclusions from time stamps, Lyon said. Following a news event like this, the AP does not distribute pictures sequentially; photos are moved based on news value and how quickly they are available for an editor to transmit.
The AP indicates to its members when they are sent on the wire, and member Web sites sometimes use a different time stamp to show when they are posted.
Dan says he'd Rather believe the photo's were "staged but ccurate."
Fake but accurate?
I haven't seen the pictures but are there shadows from the sun that can be used as "solar time stamps"?
What's three to twelve hours among friends?
< /sarc >
No. Just the bodies of the same two children shown over and over in different places. In an ambulance, hours before they were "pulled out of the wreckage", all accompanied by what looks like a "deputy Baghdad Bob"; the same guy, at all the atrocity sites.
If you look at the complement of photo's...Same kid. Same guy displaying but he has changed his outfit.
AP, Reuters, et al didn't have to make this statement on the 9-11 photos of dead bodies. They refused to run them then and they still refuse to run them today.
This double standard sucks. The media is serving as a propaganda tool for the devil incarnate.
I definitely catch a whiff of self-righteous indignation in the responses of the "news" agencies. I wonder which they find more offensive, that someone would suggest the photos were staged, or that someone would not automatically fall hook-line-and-sinker for the brand of BS they're peddling on a daily basis.
The drive by media doesn't care. Pepper the papers with loud headlines and move on.
Absolutely, do I believe Hezbollah values the deaths of Lebanese children for PR to be used as a weapon. Patrick, get your head out of your ass.
The media later explained the time delay in "blowing up" by saying that maybe some Hezbollah shells were ignited by a fire from the attacks.
In a word, yes.
Without question.
If there are bodies falling off a funeral procession which then jump up and get back on the platform, why is this so hard to believe?
Photos never could be trusted to tell the truth.
The Communists (Soviet, Red Chinese, Cuban, Vietnamese, et al) repeated painted figures in and out of group shots depending on where they stood in political favor.
The cameraman could also frame an image (or an editor crop it so) as to change the viewer's perception of a situation.
In the age of digital photography, manipulation of the image can be even more detailed.
The media has been lying for decades with fabricated witnesses and selective reporting.
Israel has no choice but to treat these Journalist, Reporters, Photographers and all other MSM entities like the enemy they are in order to win this war and that may mean to take them out.
"Meanwhile, the Red Cross in Qana now states the death toll was half of what is being reported. It is now officially at 28, the media continues to report 60."
It is like Katrina. Thousands dead. Then it was 100. Now that they are finding bodies, "see, we told you it was thousands."
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