Siberia said:I noticed that the Syrian female reporter, Yara, was speaking English in the film and decided to search for the whole version of her story in English. I couldn't find anything about her at first ...
I also found the story of Yara Saleh - the journalist from The Syrian Diary. It is curious, but BBC made their own documentary based on her story and.. deleted it. Only the text still can be found at their website: a miserable, disgusting BS.
But there is still a short fragment of BBC interview with Yara on YouTube:
Another fragment, first 5-6 minutes of the 2-part documentary is still available at Guardian (posted one day after the above linked article with the video removed):
_http://www.theguardian.com/media/video/2013/feb/11/syrian-regime-state-tv-station-video
But I found the whole film.
Both parts together in one video with over a minute of a blank screen in between. Not sure it's really worth watching though (I did watch it). Basically, the BBC Arabic reporter visits the studio of Syrian News Channel (Al-Ikhbariyah Syria), accompanies some of its journalists during, and after, their work hours and goes with one of them, Ruba Al-Hajali, during her days off to visit her family as she does every weekend. He tries hard to make them admit they work for Assad and do what is demanded of them. They all stand their ground despite his traps.
At the end, he asks why they don't question the government, officials, and he seems unable to understand the answer: that's not the right time to do it. That's time for supporting their legal government and its army, so to free the country from domestic and foreign terrorists first. Only then, with peace regained and their own - as the media - safety, the politics along with officials' mistakes can be brought up and dealt with. Here the BBC report cannot help himself and makes a snappy remark: "Why would they wait till tomorrow to start asking the questions? Government policy of today seems to remain unchallenged across Syrian official media."
Do they broadcast propaganda? Sure they do. The people, the Syrian army need it. They need hope and encouragement. But, imo, Al-Ikhbariyah's 'propaganda' is nothing like the opposite one, nothing like Western shameless lies driven by grid and inhumanity.
At the very end we learn from the video that after the BBC reporter left Syria, Al-Ikhbariyah has been taken off of Arab and European satellite feeds under EU and Arab League sanctions imposed on Syria. So it has switched to a Russian satellite and the Internet.
Anyway, if anyone is interested, here it is:
Syria - Reporting for Al-Assad - 47 min (9 February 2013)
_http://www.journeyman.tv/67065/documentaries/reporting-for-alassad.html
While searching for the 'documentary' I came across Thierry Meyssan's interview with Yara where she talks about being kidnapped:
_http://www.voltairenet.org/article175486.html
Arwenn said:I am really surprised that they let her go, given the atrocities that were documented in The Syrian Diary. Journalists are obviously targets and a major threat to the web of lies constructed by the PTB.
Here is Yara's account on how it has happened that some of them managed to escape:
_http://www.sampsoniaway.org/sw-daily/2014/06/17/former-syrian-prisoners-in-their-own-voices-yara-saleh-journalist/