Kalau benar demikian, kasian juga nasib wartawati ini. Maunya kalau
mungkin, yang melakukan di adili. Namun nasib sial yang menimpa wartawan
bukan hany ini, bisa diikuti hampir dari seluruh dunia di tempat yang
bergolak. Jadi ngirim wartawati hendaknya dipertimbangkan masak-masak
kecuali untuk naikkan ranking (atau oplah) perusahaan yang ngirim. Kan
bukan rahasia lagi?

Kejadiannya persis Ahmadiya Cikeusik. Siap dengan video dan masa
penzaliman agar hasilnya kelak bisa disebar keseluruh jagad. Murah dan
cerdik, apalagi pakai kerjasama  dengan pelaku bayaran profesional.
Kasihan yang dikorbankan.

Kasus Temanggung sami mawon. Ngapain Richmond dagang rongsokan jauh-jauh
dari Jakarta.

--- In [email protected], "sunny" <ambon@...> wrote:
>
>
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/mob-stripped-and-beat-tv-repo\
rter-in-cairos-tahrir-square-it-has-emerged/story-e6frg6so-1226008941002
>
> Mob stripped and beat TV reporter in Cairo's Tahrir Square, it has
emerged
> Marie Colvin
> From: The Sunday Times
> February 20, 2011 1:06PM
>
> A US-based TV journalist attacked in Cairo's Tahrir Square was
stripped and beaten with fists and the poles of hand-held flags,
according to sources in America.
>
> Lara Logan, 39, a foreign correspondent on the CBS News show 60
Minutes, was recovering in private with her husband, Joseph Burkett,
their son and her stepdaughter.
>
> According to one source, parts of her body were covered in red marks.
They were originally thought to have been caused by bites but on
examination proved to have been made by aggressive pinching.
>
> Security guards who had escorted her to the square were badly beaten.
One suffered a broken hand.
>
> "Lara is getting better daily," said a friend in America. "The
psychological trauma is as bad as, if not worse than, the physical
injuries. She might talk about it at some time in the future, but not
now." She was not answering emails.
>
> CBS News said Logan had suffered a "brutal and sustained sexual
assault". The network said a mob of about 200 men had been "whipped into
a frenzy" as she filmed a segment from Tahrir Square on the night Hosni
Mubarak, the Egyptian president, resigned.
>
> Within hours of the attack Logan was flown out of Cairo and spent five
days in hospital in New York.
>
> Tahrir Square was the epicentre of the revolution and until that night
had been safer than most of the rest of Cairo. Soldiers in tanks guarded
the entrances, checking identity documents, and volunteers searched
everyone who entered the square for weapons.
>
> Shortly after Mr Mubarak's resignation the atmosphere changed. The
controls at the entrances disappeared and people who had never visited
the square poured in, many of them aggressive and scornful of the
political idealism of the protesters who had slept there round the
clock.
>
> The South African-born Logan, her crew and a security detail appear to
have been surrounded near a tent city that had sprung up in the square.
The crowd fastened on to the petite blonde journalist and began
jostling, shouting, and yelling "spy".
>
> In the melee Logan became separated from her crew and security. One
source said soldiers went in to rescue them but Logan fell as they tried
to escape. Sources in America said the attack went on for up to 30
minutes. Her clothes were torn off and the crowd hit her and beat her
with poles during the assault. Shouts of "Israeli" enraged the crowd
even more.
>
> Logan was finally rescued by about 20 soldiers and women in the square
and taken to her hotel, the Four Seasons. The crew tried to find a woman
to "treat her wounds",but then called the hotel doctor who treated her
injuries and gave her a sedative.
>
> CBS has refused to release details and few in the network knew of the
assault before it was announced last Tuesday night by Katie Couric, the
network's star presenter. "I don't think anyone knows what happened in
that square except Lara," said a source at CBS.
>
> More than 140 journalists have been attacked while they covered the
revolution that erupted on January 25, sparked by a similar uprising in
Tunisia and fuelled by the same grievances of poverty and political
oppression. Few encountered the ferocity faced by Logan. It was doubly
surprising because Tahrir Square had been a haven for women, who are
routinely harassed in Egypt - groped or subjected to obscene catcalls. A
survey in 2008 found that 98 per cent of foreign women visiting Egypt
had been harassed.
>
> In Tahrir Square, however, the scene of daily demonstrations until
Mubarak's resignation on February 11, women marvelled at the freedom
they enjoyed from pests.
>
> Logan was attacked after 1am as she filmed a segment to go with a
scheduled interview of Wael Ghonim, the Google executive who set up a
Facebook page that helped inspire the revolution. She flew home before
the interview took place.
>
> Xenophobia is likely to have been as much a factor as Logan's gender.
Until Mr Mubarak was forced out, state media had been broadcasting and
printing charges that foreigners were behind the uprising or were
sending home images tarnishing Egypt's reputation. Several reports said
Israeli spies were disguised as foreign journalists.
>
> Logan had already faced the hostility inspired by the regime. She and
her team had been detained a week earlier and held in Alexandria,
accused of being foreign agents or Israeli spies, then forced on to a
plane the next day.
>
> "Our driver was beaten," she said in an interview at the time. "They
blindfolded me, they kept us in stress positions - they wouldn't let me
put my head down. It was all through the night. We were pretty
exhausted."
>
> Despite her traumatic experience, friends expect Logan to return to
the Middle East. They said that she may have started as a swimwear model
but colleagues' cynicism about her glamorous looks faded as she proved
herself in war zones.
>
> Martin Frizell, a former colleague at GMTV, said: "There's a lot of
chauvinism in TV news, particularly among war correspondents. But even
though she happens to look like a model, she has bigger balls than most
men."
>
> The Sunday Times
>
> Related Coverage
>   a.. Frenzied assault on West's values The Daily Telegraph, 17 hours
ago
>   b.. Obama calls as reporter heads home Adelaide Now, 3 days ago
>   c.. Sex attack on reporter in Cairo Courier Mail, 3 days ago
>   d.. Women free TV reporter from violent mob The Daily Telegraph, 3
days ago
>   e.. Mob attacks CBS journalist in Egypt Perth Now, 4 days ago
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>




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