Son of War
Freelance photojournalist Ahmed Deeb has been travelling to Syria for years.
He is one of the few journalists still actively documenting the conflict.
While his images of fighters and everyday Syrians alike travel the globe, his work is poorly paid and highly dangerous.
The Deadliest Beat
It’s not necessary to carry a gun to fight, a camera … is also a weapon. |
The daily headlines in the Mexican media are often filled with stories of death and violence.
The crimes often remain unsolved but journalists at the weekly newspaper Riodece risking their lives to report the grim truth about Mexico’s violent drug war.
The journalists tackle the complex politics behind the war on drugs, chasing stories that point to collusion and corruption in high places.
Eyes of Nuba
For Ahmed Khatir, when war broke out between Sudan’s government and Nuban rebels in June 2011, he watched, powerless, as Sudanese soldiers burned his family’s home.
But instead of taking up arms to join the rebels he decided to join a group of citizen journalists who are determined to make the world take notice as another African conflict unfolds.
Previous reports
Reporting Syria: ‘There’s a direct threat for everyone’
How to solve impunity when journalists are targeted
Women reporters on the front line
With the journalists on the frontline in Iraq
Saudi Arabia ‘must go back to proper religious roots’
Israel’s settlements: 50 years of land theft explained
Robert Mugabe: Portrait of a presidency
https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/frontline/film/inside-assads-syria/