Don Mccullin Conflict – People – Landscape

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Don Mccullin Conflict – People – Landscape HAUSER & WIRTH SOMERSET Press Release Don McCullin Conflict – People – Landscape Hauser & Wirth Somerset 15 November 2015 – 31 January 2016 Opening: Saturday 14 November, 5 – 7 pm This November, Hauser & Wirth Somerset is honoured to unveil an intimate retrospective by Britain’s most celebrated photojournalist, Don McCullin. The focused exhibition will present a culmination of work spanning the photographer’s career to date; from early beginnings in North London to extensive social documentary, unsparing war reportage, haunting Somerset vistas and contemplative still lifes. The retrospective will map over five decades of visual history, bringing together a broad selection of McCullin’s most powerful and unforgettable images, alongside a series of compositions of the Somerset landscape he calls home. In addition to his photographic oeuvre McCullin will present a collection of personal memorabilia acquired throughout his lifetime, featuring the Nikon camera that notoriously saved his life from a sniper bullet during the Vietnam war. The comprehensive showcase will present a chronological selection of the photographer’s most poignant and best known reportage. The exhibition commences with a selection of the photojournalist’s early professional photography, featuring his first published image in The Observer dating back to 15 February 1959. ‘The Guvnors’ was taken in Finsbury Park and marked the start of McCullin’s passionate documentation of London gang culture and impoverished urban Britain throughout the sixties and seventies. His work during this time created a harsh spotlight on the reality of life post-war, including the stark landscapes of the industrial North, the increasing unemployment and homeless levels in the capital and growing unrest across the country. HAUSER & WIRTH Don McCullin has witnessed some of the most harrowing humanitarian disasters of the last half century, having covered every major conflict in his adult lifetime. His assignments included: the Vietnam and Biafra War, Northern Irish ‘Troubles’, the construction of the Berlin Wall, the Lebanese civil war, Belgian Congo, the Russian invasion of Afghanistan and the fall of Phnom Penh. Never one to grow complacent, the veteran war correspondent travelled, alongside The Times journalist Anthony Loyd, on his latest assignment to cover the war in Aleppo, Syria at the age of 77. McCullin’s war documentation is undisputedly his most famous, obsessively drawn to the brutality of combat and its savage aftermath his images have adorned national newspapers and international magazines, contributing significantly to the widespread growth of anti-war feeling across the country. In 1977 he was appointed a Fellow of the Royal Photographic Society and in 1993 he became the first photojournalist to be awarded CBE. Having immersed himself in many of the most remote regions of the world, McCullin’s interest in travel and primitive communities has naturally encompassed a large proportion of his professional profile. The photographer has dedicated a lot of his personal time to far-flung regions of Africa, India and the Middle East. Between 2003 and 2004, McCullin travelled from Addis Ababa in Ethiopia to the valley of the Omo River leading down to the border with Sudan. For the last two decades McCullin has turned to look at the land around him, namedly the Somerset village in which he was evacuated during the Blitz. Often referring to the sweeping rural landscape as his greatest salvation, the accomplished photographer demonstrates the full mastery of his medium with stark black and white images resonating with human emotion whilst retaining the honesty and grit synonymous with his earlier works. 'For me photography was originally nothing to do with war, it was to do with the beautiful', Don has stated when asked about his diverse practice, and with these powerful compositions of wild heavens and flooded countryside he has finally come full circle and able to seek redemption in his surroundings. HAUSER & WIRTH About the Artist Don McCullin is one of the most important war photographers of the late twentieth century, best known for his broad war reportage and critical social documentation. Between 1966 and 1984, he worked for The Sunday Times Magazine under Editor-in-Chief Harold Evans and Art Editor David King, it was during this time he released his most celebrated images. He has since expanded his oeuvre with independent trips to India, Africa and the Middle East, continuing to raise awareness of global humanatarian issues and war-torn areas with unflinching honesty. In 1977 he was made a Fellow of the Royal Photographic Society, followed by the Royal Photographic Society's Special 150th Anniversary Medal and Honorary Fellowship (HonFRPS) in 2003. In 1993 he became the first photojournalist to be honoured with a CBE in recognition of his sustained and significant contribution to photojournalism. He has since been awarded a number of Honorary Doctorates and Degrees from The University of Bath, University of Bradford, Open University and University of Gloucestershire. In 2006 he received the Cornell Capa Infinity Award for 'distinguished achievement in photography' at the International Center of Photography, New York. In 2013, McCullin was honoured with an exhibition at Visa Pour L'Image, the International festival of photojournalism in Perpignan. Critically acclaimed solo exhibitions include: Don McCullin: Sleeping with Ghosts, Barbican Centre, London (1998); Photographs 1961-2001, Maison Européenne de la Photographie, Paris (2001); Una Trayectoria Heroica, Canal de Isabell II Cultural Center, Madrid (2008); Shaped By War, exhibited at the Imperial War Museum North, Salford (2010), Victoria Art Gallery, Bath (2010), and the Imperial War Museum, London (2012); Don McCullin: Platinum, Hamiltons Gallery, London (2011); The Impossible Peace, Palazzo Magnani, Reggio Emilia, Italy (2011), Don McCullin, Tate Britain (2012); Eighty, Hamiltons Gallery, London (2015). Notable publications include: Hearts of Darkness: Photographs by Don McCullin, Secker and Warburg, (1980); Beirut: A City in Crisis, New English Library (1983); Sleeping with Ghosts: A Life's Work in Photography, Jonathan Cape, (1994); India, Jonathan Cape, (1999); Unreasonable Behaviour: An Autobiography, Don McCullin with Lewis Chester, Vintage Books, (2002); Don McCullin in Africa, Jonathan Cape (2005); Don McCullin in England, Jonathan Cape (2007); Southern Frontiers: A Journey Across the Roman Empire, Jonathan Cape (2010). Press Contacts: Hauser & Wirth Somerset Copyright and Courtesy Credits: Laura Cook Durslade Farm, Dropping Lane [email protected] Bruton, Somerset BA10 0NL Dew Pond, Somerset +44 (0)797 352 6811 1988 Gelatin Silver Print Olivia Cerio Gallery hours: Dimensions variable [email protected] 10 am – 5 pm (March – October) +44 (0) 207 183 3577 10 am – 4 pm (November – February) Suspected Lumumbist freedom fighters www.hauserwirthsomerset.com being tormented before execution, Stanleyville, Congo #hauserwirth 1964 Gelatin Silver Print Dimensions variable Tibetan refugees at the railway station, Delhi 1965 Gelatin Silver Print Dimensions variable All Images: © Don McCullin/Contact Press Images..
Recommended publications
  • Declaration of John Moore Witherow with Exhibit A
    Case 1:16-cv-01423-ABJ Document 42-12 Filed 03/22/18 Page 1 of 72 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CATHLEEN COLVIN et al., Civil No. 1:16-cv-01423 (ABJ) Plaintiffs, V. SYRIAN ARAB REPUBLIC, Defendant. Declaration of John Moore Witherow I, John Moore Witherow, of 1 London Bridge Street, London, SE1 9GF, declare as follows: 1. I am the Editor of The Times, a London newspaper which was first published in 1785. From 1995 to 2013 I was Editor of The Sunday Times, where I met and worked with Marie Colvin. The Sunday Times and The Times are owned by the same publisher but are formally separate newspapers. 2. I submit this declaration to describe to the Court the circumstances of Marie's last assignment to the Syrian Arab Republic and the reactions to her killing in the world of journalism; the breadth and success of her career; and my expectations about what more she might have done had she not been killed in Horns on February 22, 2012. 3. All of my statements are based on personal knowledge unless otherwise indicated. 1 Case 1:16-cv-01423-ABJ Document 42-12 Filed 03/22/18 Page 2 of 72 My background and career 4. I have been in journalism since I was 19. I started my career when I went to Namibia (then South West Africa) in 1970 hoping to teach in Ovamboland on the Angolan border, and ended up working on a development project and working freelance for the BBC Africa Service when I was denied the necessary entry permit.
    [Show full text]
  • My War Gone By, I Miss It So Is His Memoir of That Conflict
    ANTHONY LOYD is an award-winning foreign correspondent who has reported from numerous conflict zones including the Balkans, Afghanistan, Syria, Libya, Iraq and Chechnya. A former infantry officer, he left the British army after the First Gulf War and went to live in Bosnia, where he started reporting for The Times. My War Gone By, I Miss It So is his memoir of that conflict. Praise for My War Gone By, I Miss It So ‘An extraordinary memoir of the Bosnian War … savage and mercilessly readable … deserves a place alongside George Orwell, James Cameron and Nicholas Tomalin. It is as good as war report- ing gets. I have nowhere read a more vivid account of frontline fear and survival. Forget the strategic overview. All war is local. It is about the ditch in which the soldier crouches and the ground on which he fights and maybe dies. The same applies to the war reporter. Anthony Loyd has been there and knows it’ Martin Bell, The Times ‘A truly exceptional book, one of those rare moments in jour- nalistic writing when you can sit back and realise that you are in the presence of somebody willing to take the supreme risk for a writer, of extending their inner self. I finished reading Anthony Loyd’s account of his time in the Balkans and Chechnya only a few days ago and am still feeling the after-effects … I read his story of war and addiction (to conflict and heroin) with a sense of gratitude for the honesty and courage on every page’ Fergal Keane, Independent ‘Not since Michael Herr wrote Dispatches has any journalist written so persuasively about
    [Show full text]
  • Motivation Explained a Study of War Reporters
    The Department of International Environment and Development Studies, Noragric, is the international gateway for the Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU). Eight departments, associated research institutions and the Norwegian College of Veterinary Medicine in Oslo. Established in 1986, Noragric’s contribution to international development lies in the interface between research, education (Bachelor, Master and PhD programmes) and assignments. The Noragric Master thesis are the final theses submitted by students in order to fulfil the requirements under the Noragric Master programme “International Environmental Studies”, “International Development Studies” and “International Relations”. The findings in this thesis do not necessarily reflect the views of Noragric. Extracts from this publication may only be reproduced after prior consultation with the author and on condition that the source is indicated. For rights of reproduction or translation contact Noragric. © Maikki Fonneløp, December 2015 [email protected] Noragric Department of International Environment and Development Studies P.O. Box 5003 N-1432 Ås Norway Tel.: +47 64 96 52 00 Fax: +47 64 96 52 01 Internet: http://www.nmbu.no/noragric 1 2 Acknowledgement First I want to thank my supervisor, Associate Professor Stig Jarle Hansen, for his help with the structural and theoretical framework. With his expertise in international relations he has been a source for inspiration, and I want to thank him for his patience and trust. I am grateful for the openhearted discussions I had with author Geir Angell Øygarden about the many topics surrounding war reporters. Thanks to him I was able to get an overview of the vast subject which ultimately led me to decide the objectives I wanted to follow.
    [Show full text]
  • My War Gone By, I Miss It So Free
    FREE MY WAR GONE BY, I MISS IT SO PDF Anthony Loyd | 320 pages | 22 Apr 2014 | Grove Press / Atlantic Monthly Press | 9780802122322 | English | New York, United States My War Gone by, I Miss it So by Anthony Loyd | Waterstones Born to a distinguished family steeped in military tradition, raised on stories of wartime and ancestral heroes, Anthony Loyd longed to experience war from the front lines. He left England at the age of twenty-six to document the conflict in Bosnia, and for the following years he witnessed the killings of one of the most callous and chaotic clashes on European soil. Addicted to the adrenaline of armed combat, he returned home to wage a longstanding personal battle against substance abuse. Shocking and violent, yet lyrical and ultimately redemptive, this book is a breathtaking feat of reportage and an uncompromising look at the terrifyingly seductive power of war. The fear and confusion of battle are I Miss It So vivid that in places, they rise like acrid smoke from the page. Some of the finest writing to come out of the Bosnian conflict. His prose can be both beautiful and disturbing. Strassel, The Wall Street Journal. This may just be flat-on-your-belly grittiest coverage to come out of those tormented killing zones thus far. This is pure war reporting. Loyd waxes eloquent on the backblast of his war time, a heroin addiction that begins before his arrival and becomes the only way he can survive his breaks from the fighting. Or it takes someone like Anthony Loyd.
    [Show full text]
  • Vicious Circle: the Dynamics of Occupation and Resistance in Iraq Part One
    Vicious Circle: The Dynamics of Occupation and Resistance in Iraq Part One. Patterns of Popular Discontent Project on Defense Alternatives Research Monograph #10 Carl Conetta 18 May 2005 Project on Defense Alternatives Commonwealth Institute, 186 Hampshire Street Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA 02139 (617) 547-4474 Vicious Circle: The Dynamics of Occupation and Resistance in Iraq. Part One. Patterns of Popular Discontent Project on Defense Alternatives Research Monograph #10 18 May 2005 INDEX 1. Introduction: Iraqi public sentiments regarding the occupation ............. 2 2. What drives popular oppositional sentiment? ............................ 2 2.1 The power of nationalism ............................................. 3 2.2 War-related fatalities: their extent and significance ......................... 4 2.3 Coercive practices of the occupation: their extent and effect .................. 6 2.3.1 House raids....................................................... 6 2.3.2 Street patrols...................................................... 9 3. From anger to insurgency ............................................ 11 4. The fog and friction of occupation ..................................... 12 5. Variations in Iraqi public opinion by region and community ............... 15 5.1 Is life better? ...................................................... 15 5.2 Foreign troop presence and behavior ................................... 17 6. Foundation of Kurdish opinion ....................................... 18 7. Foundation of Shiite ambivalence
    [Show full text]
  • Timeline of UK Media and GUTTMAN Pubjun2021 Vor
    King’s Research Portal Document Version Publisher's PDF, also known as Version of record Link to publication record in King's Research Portal Citation for published version (APA): Guttmann, A., & Karimi, B. (2021). Timeline of UK Media and Middle East Experts’ Anticipation of the rise of ISIS and UK government reactions. Citing this paper Please note that where the full-text provided on King's Research Portal is the Author Accepted Manuscript or Post-Print version this may differ from the final Published version. If citing, it is advised that you check and use the publisher's definitive version for pagination, volume/issue, and date of publication details. And where the final published version is provided on the Research Portal, if citing you are again advised to check the publisher's website for any subsequent corrections. General rights Copyright and moral rights for the publications made accessible in the Research Portal are retained by the authors and/or other copyright owners and it is a condition of accessing publications that users recognize and abide by the legal requirements associated with these rights. •Users may download and print one copy of any publication from the Research Portal for the purpose of private study or research. •You may not further distribute the material or use it for any profit-making activity or commercial gain •You may freely distribute the URL identifying the publication in the Research Portal Take down policy If you believe that this document breaches copyright please contact [email protected] providing details, and we will remove access to the work immediately and investigate your claim.
    [Show full text]
  • A Foreign Correspondent's Retrospective On
    ABSTRACT Title: "THERE WILL ALWAYS BE ANOTHER WAR": A FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT’S RETROSPECTIVE ON REPORTING FROM AROUND THE WORLD Sharon Maria Behn, Master of Arts, 2014 Directed By: Associate Dean Ira Chinoy, Philip Merrill College of Journalism Every day, hundreds of journalists risk their lives to cover news developments in volatile areas of the world. They have been beaten, kidnapped, tortured, and killed. Yet they continue to do their jobs, and new reporters join the fray. Their work as foreign correspondents in challenging environments carries a high price that is not fully recognized by news organizations, the public, and often not even by the correspondents themselves. This thesis helps provide an understanding of that human cost. The methodology is autobiography, which allows for an intimate look at the behind-the- scenes experiences and personal toll during a 30-year career in journalism. Salient themes include employment status – staffer vs. freelancer or stringer – as well as gender, ethics, and fear and its consequences. The need for such understanding has become increasingly relevant as many media organizations, under budgetary pressure, ask reporters to deliver more and ever faster from a dangerous world. "THERE WILL ALWAYS BE ANOTHER WAR": A FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT’S RETROSPECTIVE ON REPORTING FROM AROUND THE WORLD Sharon Maria Behn Thesis submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of the University of Maryland, College Park, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts 2014 Advisory Committee: Associate Dean Ira Chinoy, Chair Professor Maurine Beasley Associate Professor Christopher Hanson © Copyright by Sharon Maria Behn 2014 Dedication To my children.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Have You Ever Been in Bosnia?: British Military Travelers in The
    1 Have you ever been in Bosnia?: British military travelers in the Balkans since 1992 Abstract: Tens of thousands of British military personnel traveled in former Yugoslavia as peacekeepers between 1992 and 2007. The settlements where British forces established their military presence and supply chain were conceptually far from former Yugoslavia’s tourist sites, but military travelers made sense of them by drawing on the commonplaces of previous travel accounts and the lessons of pre-deployment training. British military travelers constructed themselves as often frustrated helpers in Bosnia who struggled with political limitations on their activities but found satisfaction in improving socio-economic relations at the level of the immediate community. For troops, long otiose periods in a stabilizing and startlingly cheap country engendered a touristic sensibility. This paper draws on published memoirs and more than fifty new oral history interviews with British peacekeepers and their Bosnian employees to illustrate how British military travelers drew on, perpetuated and changed the patterns and representation of British travel to the Balkans. Keywords: peacekeeping, military, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Balkans, travel Word count: 10,000 2 Since 1992, when the United Nations Protection Force (UNPROFOR) entered Croatia, tens of thousands of British military men and women have traveled to former Yugoslavia. The troop contribution that began with one field ambulance and several military observers in Croatia became dozens of infantry and cavalry battalions, combat support regiments, logistics units, headquarters establishments and individual postings as the UK became one of the multinational force’s lead nations in ‘the Balkans’. British troops served in Bosnia- Herzegovina (BiH) until 2007, implementing and monitoring the Dayton Peace Agreement and experiencing the changeover from UNPROFOR to its NATO replacements, IFOR (Implementation Force) and SFOR (Stabilization Force).
    [Show full text]
  • Victims of Intimidation Freedom of Speech Within Europe’S Muslim Communities
    Victims of Intimidation FREEDOM OF SPEECH WITHIN Europe’S MUSLIM COMMUNITIES Victims of Intimidation FREEDOM OF SPEECH WITHIN Europe’S MUSLIM COMMUNITIES Douglas Murray and Johan Pieter Verwey 2008 THE CENTRE FOR SOCIAL COHESION The Centre for Social Cohesion Clutha House 10 Storey’s Gate London SW1P 3AY Tel: +44 (0)20 7222 8909 Fax: +44 (0)5 601527476 Email: [email protected] www.socialcohesion.co.uk The Centre for Social Cohesion Limited by guarantee. Registered in England and Wales: No. 6609071 © The Centre for Social Cohesion,October 2008 All the Institute’s publications seek to further its objective of promoting the advancement of learning. The views expressed are those of the authors, not of the Institute. All rights reserved ISBN 978-0-9560013-1-3 Printed in Great Britain by The Cromwell Press Trowbridge, Wiltshire Contents Introduction xi Methodology xiii Politicians 1 n Ahmed Aboutaleb 2 n Mimount Bousakla 4 n Ekin Deligöz 6 n Ehsan Jami 8 n Naser Khader 11 n Samira Munir 14 n Nyamko Sabuni 16 n Manu Sareen 18 Journalists 21 n Magdi Allam 22 n Reda Hassaine 26 n Nosheen Ilyas 29 n Mohamed Sifaoui 31 Activists 35 n Mina Ahadi 36 n Ayaan Hirsi Ali 39 n Seyran Ates 43 n Mansur Escudero 47 n Maryam Namazie 49 n Kadra Noor 53 Writers & Academics 57 n Afshin Ellian 58 n Salman Rushdie 60 n Mohammad Anwar Shaikh 65 n Ibn Warraq 68 Artists 71 n Rachid Ben Ali 72 n Sooreh Hera 75 n Shabana Rehman 79 n Omar Sharif 83 n Deepika Thathaal 85 Conclusion 91 vi The authors Douglas Murray Douglas Murray is the Director of the Centre for Social Cohesion.
    [Show full text]
  • Deconstructing the Heroic Myth of the War Correspondent – Chris Ayres's
    10.6094/helden.heroes.heros./2014/QM/08 Kathrin Göb 61 Deconstructing the Heroic Myth of the War Correspondent – Chris Ayres’s Memoir War Reporting for Cowards 1. The Myth of the Heroic War Mortensen notes (332). This list of famous war Cor res pondent correspondents also shows that the profession has long been dominated by men and is still “As much as I was terrifi ed [...], I also felt slightly associated with traditional ideals of masculinity, elated – heroic, in fact, for agreeing to go to Iraq” even though there are many female journalists (119). With these words, the British war corres- working in war zones today. pondent Chris Ayres describes his feelings upon his decision to report on the Iraq War for his Autobiographical texts by war correspond- newspaper, the London Times, in 2003. As this ents play an important role in the construction quote from his memoir War Reporting for Cow- of the myth of the profession. As Mark Pedelty ards (2005) suggests, war reporters not only play observes, these texts generally “portray war a role in the creation of a heroic narrative of war, correspondents’ work as frenetic, occasionally but are also often assigned the status of heroes insensate, yet ultimately heroic. Once past the themselves. As David Welch notes in the intro- obligatory self-deprecating statements of the duction to his study of war reporting, the “popular introduction, the focus turns to the reporter’s image of the war correspondent in the public im- courage, cunning, and professional conviction” agination is of a gallant, heroic fi gure bringing us (29–30).
    [Show full text]
  • UK Military Operations in Syria and Iraq
    House of Commons Defence Committee UK military operations in Syria and Iraq Second Report of Session 2016–17 HC 106 House of Commons Defence Committee UK military operations in Syria and Iraq Second Report of Session 2016–17 Report, together with formal minutes relating to the report Ordered by the House of Commons to be printed 13 September 2016 HC 106 Published on 21 September 2016 by authority of the House of Commons The Defence Committee The Defence Committee is appointed by the House of Commons to examine the expenditure, administration, and policy of the Ministry of Defence and its associated public bodies Current membership Dr Julian Lewis MP (Conservative, New Forest East) (Chair) Richard Benyon MP (Conservative, Newbury) Douglas Chapman MP (Scottish National Party, Dunfermline and West Fife) James Gray MP (Conservative, North Wiltshire) Johnny Mercer MP (Conservative, Plymouth, Moor View) Mrs Madeleine Moon MP (Labour, Bridgend) Jim Shannon MP (Democratic Unionist Party, Strangford) Ruth Smeeth MP (Labour, Stoke-on-Trent North) John Spellar MP (Labour, Warley) Bob Stewart MP (Conservative, Beckenham) Phil Wilson MP (Labour, Sedgefield) Powers The Committee is one of the departmental select committees, the powers of which are set out in the House of Commons Standing Orders, principally in SO No. 152. These are available on the internet via www.parliament.uk. Publications Committee reports are published on the Committee’s website and in print by Order of the House. Evidence relating to this report is published on the relevant inquiry page of the Committee’s website. Committee staff The current staff of the Committee are James Davies (Clerk), Dr Anna Dickson (Second Clerk), Claire Cozens, John Curtis, Dr Megan Edwards, Eleanor Scarnell and Ian Thomson (Committee Specialists), David Nicholas (Senior Committee Assistant), and Carolyn Bowes and David Gardner (Committee Assistants).
    [Show full text]
  • 62746 CONFLICT A5 Booklet
    CONFLICT AND PEACE FORUMS A practical checklist for the ethical reporting of conflicts in the 21st Century, produced by journalists, for journalists BY JAKE LYNCH REPORTING THE “A thoughtful blend of “First class” “A convincing argument” “Serious and wise” academic rigour and Fergal Keane, Susie Orbach, author Professor Ian Hargreaves, journalistic experience… Special Correspondent, BBC and psychotherapist Cardiff University To read it is to learn a little more about the true nature of events” Peter Preston, columnist and former editor, The Guardian www.ReportingtheWorld.org REPORTING THE Reporting the World – A practical checklist for the ethical reporting with journalists in many countries, and teaches an annual MA of conflicts in the 21st Century produced by journalists for course in conflict analysis and media at the University of Sydney. journalists. Production team – Annabel McGoldrick, Jake Lynch, Indra Adnan, Published by Conflict & Peace Forums Design – sugarfreedesign.co.uk Taplow Court, Taplow, Berkshire SL6 OER Photographs – Matthew Isepp Sponsored by Department for International Development About the author Seminars hosted by the Freedom Forum European Centre Jake Lynch ([email protected] ) is a freelance And SGI-UK, Buddhist Society for the Creation of Value reporter in television and print media. He was the Independent’s Sydney correspondent in 1998-9 and © copyright Conflict & Peace Forums, 2002 works in London for the BBC and Sky News, for whom he covered the Nato briefings in Brussels ISBN Number: 0-9542064-0-1 throughout the Kosovo crisis. He has conducted training dialogues presented by sponsored by hosted by www.ReportingtheWorld.org CONTENTS INTRODUCTION ............................................................................ 3 4.1.2.
    [Show full text]