Irish Aid Worker Kidnapped – Background and Interview with Regional Expert

Posted by Paul in News on July 4th, 2009 |  No Comments »

(Was due to post this on www.irishelection.com but it’s down at present)

This one doesn’t quite fit into the usual Irishelection.com remit but I figured there’d be a few of our regular readers interested in it (plus, I’m working for a non-print news organisation at the minute so I’ve no where else to put this).

I’ve just finished a brief interview with Declan Power, a security and defence expert with strong knowledge of the Darfur region. Power is former member of the Irish Defence Forces specially trained in internal security. He was deployed numerous times on overseas operations, mainly in Africa, during the course of his career. He spent three months last year working in the Darfur region as a communications officer with Irish Aid and is on his way back there at present, he is currently in the Sudanese capital, Khartoum. Power is also a freelance journalist who has worked with RTÉ, The Irish Daily Star and The Sunday Business Post, amongst others.

Quick background: Yesterday reports emerged that three people were kidnapped from the GOAL compound in Kutum, northern Darfur. John O’Shea of GOAL told The Irish Times that six armed men came to the compound and took three people away, he also said he hoped this was simply a ransom (criminal not political) kidnapping. The three kidnapped were Sharon Commins, a 32 year-old Irish woman from Clontarf, Dublin, Hilda Kawuki an Ugandan national, and an unnamed Sudanese security guard. The security guard was released almost immediately and is now being interviewed by the UN and local police.

The Darfur area has become increasingly dangerous since the International Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant for Sudanese President Omar El Bashir on charges of war crimes in March, El Bashir’s response was to expell 13 humanitarian aid agencies from the country which he accused of spying for the ICC. Four of the agencies were re-admitted earlier this year, though the Sudanese Government denies that, saying the agencies re-admitted were different to the ones expelled. This means there is no group that the international persenct in the area could point the finger at, both pro-government and rebal forces would have a motive. There have been two similar kidnappings of aid workers in recent months, one in March saw the hostages released unharmed several days later, another  in April saw the hostages released three weeks later, again unharmed.

Reuters are reporting that the local rebel militia, The Sudan Liberation Army are denying involvement in the kidnapping and blaming the government-backed Eagles of Bashif. AFP are saying the Sudanese Government are trying to contact the kidnappers.

On The Marian Finuance Show this morning O’Shea described Commins as his former “left-hand woman”. I asked Power who the likely culprits were and, given Commins position, presumably one of seniority in the area, if the hostages were specifically targeted…

The targeting is a possibility. Things are never quite what the seem out here. This doesn’t indicate the usual criminal intent. Though many cases of kidnap attemptout here are disguised as criminal but have a political purpose. Both sides [pro-gov and rebel forces] attempt to masquerade as each other in attacking UN or international staff.

Who are the likely perpetrators? The SLA rebels are denying involvement but several media outlets seem to be inferring that the Eagles of Bashif are the chief suspects…

It’s too early to tell. To be honest a denial means nothing out here. I’m still in Khartoum doing briefings so don’t have the inside track yet, but often times the group that everyone’s pointing at are not the perps. Sometimes it can be govt related or orchestrated. The ICC indictment has lead to many strange activities.

On RTÉ radio this morning John O’Shea said he hoped the department of defence would get involved, what are the possibilities of this happening?

It will be the department of foreign affairs and the UN at the heart of this, highly, highly, unlikely defence will get involved. This is a very sensitive situation, it’ll be guile and negotiations that sort this out, not force.

What kind of conditions are the two hostages likely to be kept in? Is there any precedence for this? Most seem to be released almost immediately…

Yes, immediate release that has mostly been the case in Darfur. I wouldn’t say conditions are great… similar to Darfur in general but I doubt it would be a Hezbollah-like situation – hooded and chained up. My guess is they will be treated well because they are probably part of some internal political machination. The most important thing for them is to keep their psyche intact. It would be interesting to know if GOAL routinely send their staff on personal security and reaction to hostage taking courses.

In certain situations these kidnappings are kept quie to keep the situation localised [huge media coverage increases value of hostage to kidnappers, see kidnapping of David Rohde] do you think GOAL are doing the right thing in splashing this everywhere?

Yes, max publicity, splash it everywhere, what is needed is leverage (with the UN, dept of foreign affairs, African Union etc).

As I said, it was brief. I tired to contact GOAL to ask if they routinely sent staff on personal security and reaction to hostage-taking course but couldn’t get through to anyone in their offices – had no time to dig out press officer numbers. In fact, I’m not sure if there is a press officer, O’Shea seems to do much of it himself.

Another report from The Irish Times emerged as I wrote this – mainly quotes from John O’Shea’s appearance on Marian Finuance, see here – note, O’Shea…

… said he could not comment on whether the kidnapping might have been carried out solely for a ransom or for political reasons, as he did not know.

“When no note is left, no words are exchanged, I can’t really be certain of anything other than GOAL have played no political role in our 24 or 25 years in Sudan.”

The agency dealt with people turning up in “desperate need” and helped them, he said.

He said the agency’s clinics, schools and feeding centres had been “open to all”.

In Darfur, he said, it would also be “quite impossible to know what is going on” among the “multitude of warring factions”.

Mr O’Shea said there had been no “ripple” effect following the eviction of 13 aid agencies from Darfur several months ago and Goal had had no problems since.

The area in which it operated was “peaceful” and, to his knowledge, had not been visited by any of the rebel groups.

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The Uptake’s Tips on Covering Events

Posted by Mark in Media on June 29th, 2009 |  No Comments »

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‘Commentariat vs. Bloggertariat’

Posted by Paul in Media on June 25th, 2009 |  1 Comment »

Strange to put a ‘verus’ in the middle but anyway… good debate. Fealty makes great points about networks and sources…

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The Media Coverage on Iran: When More means Less

Posted by Mark in Media, Opinion on June 18th, 2009 |  11 Comments »

Mousavi Supporters: ABC News

Some people who read this blog know where I’m working at the minute, it won’t surprise many of those to hear I spent my day trawling the internet for the best content from Iran. There’s a lot of it.

However, people are getting carried away. It’s not a Twitter Revolution, as some people are saying, a revolution maybe, but not one that developed on Twitter – or any other social media platform for that matter.

I was watching Twitter searches for #Iran, #Iranelections, #gr88, ‘Iran’, ‘elections’, ‘riot’, ‘Mousavi’, ‘Ahmadinejad’  and ‘protesters’ non-stop between 11am and 7pm today. 5% of it was coming from informed sources, less than that was coming from plausible eye-witnesses. The signal-to-noise ratio was awful.

Now I understand people were purposefully attempting to disguise original sources to camouflage them from government censors – but on the flipside of that there were also people attempting to appear [...] Continue Reading…

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The [L]Ink Pen 10/6/09

Posted by Mark in The Link Pen on June 10th, 2009 |  No Comments »

Shattered and very busy as of late. Doing a lot of work over on Irish Election in the last few days. I’m particularly happy that I managed to be the first person to publish a comment from Christy Burke after his resignation – the Irish Times and such just cobbled together articles from the SF press release. And they say blogs don’t do original reporting…

Anyway, quick [L]Ink Pen…

Can newspapers reassert their dominance?

Are our political institutions fit for purpose?

The University Blog is amazing. Always insightful.

Andrew Spittle is fast becoming one of my favourite online media bloggers. See his most recent post here.

More quality journalism from the Daily Fail.

I said it was a bad move by Netenyahu to go into power with some nutters. See Matthew Yglesias, “what’s Hebrew for Chutzpah?”

I relate to Russell’s state of mind – that’s slightly worrying.

So tired. Will be back in the next few days…

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Elections 2009 – From the RDS

Posted by Mark in Politics on June 6th, 2009 |  No Comments »

Irishelection.com is down (probably due to traffic! Shite!) this is due to be cross-posted over there once it returns.

Rather subdued around the count centre in the RDS at present. The media room is yet to fill up – heads from all the main outlets are kicking about though, sticking their noses into the tally centres and such. It’s a time for mingling for the press corps, get the pulse and such. I was present at a group interview with Shay Brennan earlier, he looked shell-shocked, the picture above says it all. ConorLenihan arrived as the press gang dispersed, he put one hand behind Shay’s head, pulled it forward and kissed him on the forehead. It was like something a manager would do after he substituted his favourite player for having a total shocker – surreal. The only interesting thing Brennan said during the interview was “I’m in politics for [...] Continue Reading…

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Irish Electionafied for the next few days

Posted by Mark in Personal on June 4th, 2009 |  No Comments »

I haven’t blogged for a few days because I have been busy here. I will be in the RDS (main count centre) over the weekend blogging on Irish Election and taking a few snaps for Flickr/whoever. I’ve been posting on IE for the last few days in the run-up to the election, now it’s all systems go.

The coverage on IE will be strong, there’s a liveblog, people contributing from count centres all over the country – 12 people alone in the RDS – and some videos/interviews going to be Youtubed. If you’re interested in seeing a group of new media junkies at work, watch Irish Election over the weekend.

Until after the results – while you wait with baited breath here is a stupid-cool video to entertain you.

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The [L]Ink Pen 1/6/2009

Posted by Mark in The Link Pen on June 1st, 2009 |  1 Comment »

Tune of the Week – Negative Vibes by Damien Dempsey

Google Wave is about to break across the interwebz – a game-changer it seems. Fuh’sake, another great Google invention – and it works best with Chrome. Someone needs to stop Google.

Twitter – share files via Twitter. Email is gets a little less relevant. (via Ben LaMothe)

The White House blog will start allowing comments very soon. Okay, now I’m a little more in favour – though I still think it’s a little patronising.

Advertising and maths go hand in hand. Data-mining, do they click it?

iNews – I thought “this is stupid” until I read the last line “…advertising rates for the I-News product are 10 times print advertising rates”.

Oh Snap! TED is coming to Dublin. Only 100 tickets, sold out in 50 minutes – big thanks to Ciara for allowing little ol’ moi to be her plus-one. Can’t wait.

The Lion of Myross [...] Continue Reading…

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Can I get a #wakeupmedia, please?

Posted by Mark in News on May 28th, 2009 |  No Comments »

Evan Williams is a good guy. He makes a lot of good points – most importantly he knows he doesn’t know about lots of things. And he’s cool with that. That’s why Twitter works, because those who would traditionally be in control know nobody is in control because everybody is in control.

To be honest, I have my doubts about Twitter and it’s future. I’m not sure if it’ll “go mainstream”, but that’s not what I’m here to say about the above video.

What Williams points out about 4 minutes into the video, accidentally perhaps, is that giving people a means of communicating both directly and as a group seems to result in more people communicating (shock, horror, right?).

Simply put – giving large numbers of people a way to communicate easily within large groups tends to result in an increase in the number of individuals using that tool to communicate. This [...] Continue Reading…

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Last night on Q&A

Posted by Mark in Media on May 26th, 2009 |  1 Comment »

To any non-Irish readers – The Ryan Commission Report was released last week, it detailed the horrific abuse some children were put through in Ireland by the religious orders and their lay employees mainly between the years of 1936 and 1985.

Questions and Answers is a current affairs program on RTÉ – the Irish state broadcaster. Usually audience members are given about one minute to give their opinion, last night was different however. Watch the video, the dignity and emotion expressed by the man…

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