Posted on 12/26/2006 11:33:37 AM PST by ricks_place
New York Times correspondent Carlotta Gall tells ABC News she was assaulted by plain-clothed government security agents while reporting in Quetta, a Pakistani city near the Afghan frontier where NATO suspects the Taliban hides its shadow government.
Akhtar Soomro, a freelance Pakistani photographer working with Gall, was detained for five-and-a-half hours. According to Gall, the agents broke down the door to her hotel room, after she refused to let them enter, and began to seize her notebooks and laptop. When she tried to stop them, she says one of the men punched her twice in the face and head.
"I fell backwards onto a coffee table smashing the crockery," she recalled in a written account of the incident. "I have heavy bruising on my arms, on my temple and my cheekbone, and swelling on my left eye and a sprained knee."
Gall says the agents accused her and Soomro of trying to meet the Taliban. They identified themselves as working for Pakistan's Special Branch, an undercover police department, but Gall said other local reporters identified them as employees from one of the country's two powerful spy agencies: Inter-Services Intelligence or Military Intelligence.
(Excerpt) Read more at blogs.abcnews.com ...
The Press in general seems to think that they are not "ordinary people", that they are above it all. Much as Doctors or Priests and Nuns have a "calling", Reporters think they too have a sacred calling... that they are Historians, above the petty bickering and bartering in the world. When they arrive at the scene, combatants are to shoot around them, not question their story or sources.
And then they get these rude awakenings... beaten up, head sliced off, shot on the battlefield.
GUILTY!
This shouldn't be news to reporters.
CNN suppressed news reports of abuse and torture under Saddam Hussein to maintain their Baghdad Bureau.
Reporters don't tell all that they know and they know that non-Western governments do not respect a free press.
We need to get those guys visas. I wouldn't mind having them come over here, giving them a picture of Frank Rich and a coupla Benjamins and letting their imaginations go to work, if you get my drift.
WHEN YOU GO TO THESE PLACES YOU TAKES YOUR CHANCES. IF SHE DOESNT LIKE TAKING CHANCES ,SHE SHOULD LOOK FOR A NEW LINE OF WORK.
Carlotta Gall
She's got a lotta gall passing herself off as a woman.
NYT culture of audacity and arrogance...they are the news..
Sorry, did not realize the snake story from "Natural Born Killers" was verboten. I though it was kind of appropriate on this thread.
WOW! That picture.I jumped like Cramer did when he saw the "breathtaking' baby.
Hmmmmmm...She visited a land where men take absolutely no shite from in your face femme-nazi women and Harvard lawyers are to find.
Welcome to the Muslim world Carlotta Gall.
Whats more likely is that Pakistan has skeletons in its cupboard to hide. They wouldn't want western media getting a clear wind of the support for the Taliban within the pak establishment.
Daniel pearl too was beheaded because he discovered too much about the links between al qaeda and the pak intelligence agency ISI.
Until I see photos of the alleged perps allegedly attacking the alleged reporter, I am unable to believe the alleged attack took place by the alleged assailants.
...two peanuts walking down the street, one was assaulted.
Doogle
YOu just hit on the head LOL!
Who wouldn't want assault NY Times reporter ROFL
Recent and archived news articles by Carlotta Gall of The New York Times. (there are hundreds of them)
http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/g/carlotta_gall/index.html
What's the frequency, Gretchen?
--On the left photographed with mom.--
With an equine face like that, she's got to be related to Jean Francois Kerree.
No wait... that only works here in the USA.
-PJ
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.