Referring
to your reports of August 31 and July 26, may I suggest that you reconsider your views about the relative value of mainstream media versus the Internet, as suggested
by your headline; “Downer's unfounded faith in the internet”.
In view
of recent revelations, there is increasing cause to rate selected bloggers as more credible than some very respectable names
in the communication world. Indeed, Mr. Downer is to be congratulated for his foresight in leading the way to recognizing
this important fact.
Do you remember
how New York Times reporter Jayson Blair shocked us with his admission of plagiarism and his faked reports? How Dan Rather
was forced to resign by bloggers? And the recent admission by Reuters of faked pictures?
In these
circumstances it would be grossly negligent to ignore the very carefully researched and reasoned evidence published on the
zombietime site.
It is evident
that all the allegations that Israel deliberately bombed Red Cross ambulances derive from statements by Red Cross workers.
As a conscientious journalist, perhaps you will agree that this creates a serious problem.
In a recent
BBC Hardtalk interview Balthasar Staehelin, the ICRC delegate-general for the Middle East and North Africa was emphatic that
Red Cross workers are not permitted to give evidence as witnesses in any court hearings relating to their work in conflict
zones as this might prejudice their access to the belligerents. Moreover, the fact that Red Cross workers in Lebanon are drawn
from the local population makes it unrealistic to expect them to be unbiased.
We are therefore
faced with the situation, that while you, as a journalist may be impartial and may therefore wish to be objective, you are
dependent on sources who are not neutral. And who are free to color their reports without any need to substantiate them. Nor
need they fear cross examination.
Let us take,
as an example, the much-quoted Qassem Shalin, who appears to be your main source.
A very comprehensive
report of the ambulance incident is presented on the web by Dahr Jamail, the award-winning, independent journalist who is
reputed to be one of the best sources on the War in Iraq. He was a very prolific supplier of photographs of this ambulance
incident. Jamail refers to Red Cross worker Kasssem Shaulan, who I assume is
the Qassem Shalin quoted by you. Please correct me if I am wrong in making this assumption.
There are
several inconsistencies in Shaulan’s reporting which give rise to serious doubts about his credibility. He told Jamail
that he had been in the ambulance at the time of the bombing. However, in your August 31 article you wrote that Shalin was
lifting the rear ramp of the ambulance when the missile hit. This would be quite a feat in view of the fact that according
to your July 26 article the two ambulances were traveling in convoy when “fired on by an Israeli Apache helicopter as
they sped to the besieged port city of Tyre”, adding that the convoy was struck by two rockets fired from an Apache
helicopter, just before midnight, severely injuring all six people on board.”
Here we
have an even more serious inconsistency, because on August 31 you wrote that the ambulances were not hit by rockets at all,
but by missiles with small warheads fired from a drone, not a helicopter and that the warhead was designed “not to kill
anyone outside a small zone”.
While I
am not a military expert by any means, I have heard of drone missiles in which the drone itself becomes the missile but I
have not heard of a drone capable of carrying missiles and firing them with such pinpoint accuracy as to strike precisely
at the center of the crosses on the roofs of two stationery or moving ambulances. Your
clarification would be appreciated.
Jamail’s
accuracy also leaves room for considerable doubt. For example, although the number of casualties at Qana has been officially
recorded by the Red Cross as 28, Jamail reported from Qana on his website on
August 2 that Israeli bombing killed at least 60 civilians and that Red Cross workers told IPS that no Hezbollah rockets were
launched from the city before the Israeli air strike.
Appendix
A (in the right hand column) contains photographs from Jamail’s web site and from a Reuters picture published on Yahoo
News purporting to show one of the ambulances which had been deliberately bombed from the air.
On examination of these pictures, a modicum of logical reasoning shows convincingly that even a small bomb could not
have struck the vehicle depicted. A picture of an Israeli bus after attack by a suicide bomber shows vividly what the ambulance
would have looked like had it been struck by a missile.
Comparing
two photos from Jamail’s site, an external view of a hole in the roof shows it as circular and clean cut, precisely
in the position of the usual vent hole. It cannot possibly be the same hole viewed from the interior in another picture and
claimed to be of the same ambulance but with very jagged edges and non-circular shape.
All the captions in Jamail’s web page refer to the same ambulance and show Kasssem Shaulan, looking unscratched
though he claims to have been in the ambulance when it was bombed
A picture
of the same ambulance ascribed to Reuters appeared on the Yahoo News web site but has evidently been removed. The legend reports
that the ambulance was bombed in Tyre, but ICRC Bulletin 03 / 2006 reported that the incident occurred on 23 July, at 11.15
pm in Cana, (sic) a village in southern Lebanon.
You wrote
that when you and photographer Stewart Innes inspected both ambulances on the day after the incident the “mangled roofs
were not rusting at the time. By the time the photos used on the blog site were taken, rust had appeared. But this is entirely
normal in Lebanon's sultry summer climate, where humidity on the coast does not drop below 70 per cent”. This statement
is incomplete in that you do not tell us when the photographs which appear on the blog site were taken. It is not unreasonable
to assume that Mr. Innes took some photographs at the time and it would throw valuable light on the entire controversy if
you would publish them, with their unrusted roofs, for all to see. Your mention of “mangled roofs” is interesting
as all the published pictures show roofs almost complete except for the neat hole in the middle.
An aspect
which contradicts all the photos of the ambulance and your subsequent examination of them is the AP report by Kathy Gannon, of July 25, stating that both ambulances were destroyed. Is her report inaccurate and
does it call for an apology by AP?
Also difficult
to understand is the story Shalin told you when you returned to Tyre He said. "There was not a sound in the sky before the
explosions. And after that there was a battle for the next hour. We hid in a building nearby convinced we were going to die.”
This is
the first we hear of a battle. With whom? With the drone or the helicopter? When
the explosion occurred, was Shalin lifting the ramp as he told you or was he in the ambulance as he told Jamail? In either
case he was taken to Jamal Amal hospital, where you appear to have visited him. When then, was he hiding in a building?
It is not
the bloggers, as you say, who are attempting to create a smokescreen. Rather, it is the publication in mainstream media of
so many conflicting and biased reports, based on unsubstantiated hearsay, which has created a smokescreen that threatens the
credibility of serious journalism.
We owe a
debt of gratitude to bloggers like zombietime and courageous statesmen like Minister Downer for their serious contributions towards revealing the truth.