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I am a staff writer with CTV.ca News. That operation is part of CTV News, which is of course nestled into CTV Inc. and CTVglobemedia.

I don't speak for my employer on this blog. I don't comment about the internal affairs of my employer.

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Main Page  »  Media
View Article  Afghanistan, frame by frame

From the BBC:

British photographer Tim Hetherington talks about his photograph of a US soldier in Afghanistan which has won the 2007 World Press Photo Award.

The picture shows an American soldier in a bunker in Afghanistan's Korengal Valley during fierce fighting with the Taleban.


An exhausted American soldier in Afghanistan's Korengal Valley

I was working with the writer Sebastian Junger on assignment for Vanity Fair on a year-long project with Battle Company of the US 503rd Airborne Battalion.

We were based in Korengal Valley in Afghanistan's Kunar province, towards the border with Pakistan.

The area is considered to be the epicentre of the US forces fighting in Afghanistan and one of the most deadly. A place where the combat is often at close quarters.

The platoon was based at a rocky outpost called Restrepo, named after a US medic who had died. The fighting in this region is pretty intense, I was quite surprised.

I hadn't expected it to be so heavy but in this area you can expect to engage the Taleban at least once per day.

This image shows the exhaustion of a man - and the exhaustion of a nation
Gary Knight, Chairman of the World Press Photo jury
The outpost consists of a sandbagged area approximately 30m (98ft) long and 10m (32ft) wide, with a bunker at one end. The aim of the position is to protect the main US base further up the valley.

'Everyone was exhausted'

The day this picture was a pretty intense day. We'd already had two engagements with Taleban or foreign fighter insurgents in the area, and they had established a line of fire inside the base.

As the picture shows, everyone was exhausted. One guy had to jump into the base and broke his leg, requiring a medical evacuation by helicopter later in the night.

Tim Hetherington's photo essay

We later received a radio communication that a supply of grenades and suicide vests had entered the valley. We were perched on the hillside in this valley fearing the enemy had come to the perimeter of the bunker, maybe 30 meters or so and might attempt to overrun us. Let's just say we were concerned.

In the spring, another American base in Nuristan was on the end of a concentrated attack. US troops ended up calling in air support on their own compound to survive. With that fresh in our minds it wasn't impossible to contemplate the idea of being overrun. 

View Article  'Sorry, Muhammad'

A young Dane set up a Facebook group to apologize to Muslims there after the republishing of one of the 'Muhammad' cartoons following an apparent murder plot against the cartoonist.

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View Article  Danish Muslims protest cartoon reprinting

While some Muslims in Denmark used the occasion of the Muhammad cartoon reprinting to shout Islamist slogans, others wondered why nothing appeared to have been learned from when this controversy first surfaced two years ago.

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View Article  'Al-Jazeera criticizes media code'

From the BBC:

Television network al-Jazeera has said a media code adopted by Arab countries could curb freedom of expression.

The code allows authorities to withdraw permits from satellite channels deemed to have offended Arab leaders or national or religious symbols.

It was adopted this week by ministers from the 22-member Arab League at a meeting called by Egypt and Saudi Arabia.

But Qatar, where al-Jazeera is based, refused to sign up.

The network said on Friday that it considered the charter "a risk to the freedom of expression in the Arab world".

It warned that some of the charter's language was ambiguous and "could be interpreted to actively hinder independent reporting from the region".

"Any code of ethics or governance for journalistic practices should emerge, and be governed, from within the profession and not be imposed externally by political institutions," said the network's director-general, Wadah Khanfar.

View Article  'Why I'm withdrawing my human rights complaint against Ezra Levant'

Calgary imam Syed Syoharwady explains why he now thinks proceeding with a human rights complaint against Ezra Levant, publisher of the now-defunct Western Standard, is the wrong way to go.

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