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Tuesday, May 11, 2004 11:03:37 PM
3:03am (UK)
Images of Terror
By Ju-Lin Tan and Laura Scott, PA News
The use of shocking video images appears to be a method of propaganda increasingly favoured by terrorists.
Two years ago Muslim militants released a gruesome video of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl being murdered in captivity.
The images were said to show Mr Pearl having his throat slit from behind and his body being dragged across the floor.
His final words were said to have been recorded as, “I am a Jew, my mother is a Jew”.
Mr Pearl, 38, was kidnapped while investigating a story about terrorism in Karachi, Pakistan.
The tape of his final moments was obtained by a Pakistani journalist who gave it to the US consulate in Karachi.
Terrorism expert Professor Paul Wilkinson said the al Qaida network probably used video messages more frequently than any other terrorist organisation.
“They are in the habit of boasting about their attacks and using video messages is one of the characteristic methods of propaganda that they have developed, I would say more so than any other terrorist group,” said Prof Wilkinson, chairman of the centre for the study of terrorism and political violence at St Andrew’s University.
Hostage taking was not, however, seen as a major tactic of al Qaida, which has tended to focus on suicide and vehicle bombings, he added.
“Hostage taking has never been a major tactic ... but they seem to be moving towards that area now because of the present situation in Iraq,” he said.
Chilling video footage of three terrified blindfolded Japanese civilians who were kidnapped in southern Iraq was recently released by their captors in a bid to force Japan to pull its troops out of the country.
The images showed one of the male captives being threatened with a knife against his throat and a Japanese woman weeping as the masked kidnappers brandished their weapons.
The video was broadcast last month along with an ultimatum threatening to burn the journalist and two aid workers to death if Japan did not withdraw its troops within three days.
After the video was screened by Arabic TV station Al-Jazeera, Japan’s government said they had no plans to pull out of Iraq and the captives were later released.
Al-Jazeera was also condemned by Britain and the US for showing pictures of captives and dead bodies in breach of the Geneva Convention.
The footage apparently showed two dead British soldiers lying in the dust and two British PoWs during the Iraq war.
Videos of five captured US soldiers looking frightened and stoical were also broadcast by Al-Jazeera during the war.
The four men and a woman were thrust in front of a microphone and grilled by their Iraqi captors.
Prof Wilkinson said the use of video messages has long been popular with al Qaida leader Osama bin Laden.
Just three months after the September 11 terror attacks bin Laden issued a statement by video talking about the massacres.
The leader described the attacks against the US as “blessed” and talks about al Qaida’s aims “to stop American support for Israel, which kills our sons”.
In another tape, the terror mastermind is said to be seen laughing and boasting that the collapse of the World Trade Centre exceeded his expectations.
The recording apparently showed him grinning as he told guests at a dinner in Afghanistan that the suicide hijackers had only learned they were going to their deaths before they boarded the planes.
He told them how he had listened to the radio, waiting for news of the attacks, then celebrated afterwards with his “brothers”.
http://news.scotsman.com/latest.cfm?id=2911836
Images of Terror
By Ju-Lin Tan and Laura Scott, PA News
The use of shocking video images appears to be a method of propaganda increasingly favoured by terrorists.
Two years ago Muslim militants released a gruesome video of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl being murdered in captivity.
The images were said to show Mr Pearl having his throat slit from behind and his body being dragged across the floor.
His final words were said to have been recorded as, “I am a Jew, my mother is a Jew”.
Mr Pearl, 38, was kidnapped while investigating a story about terrorism in Karachi, Pakistan.
The tape of his final moments was obtained by a Pakistani journalist who gave it to the US consulate in Karachi.
Terrorism expert Professor Paul Wilkinson said the al Qaida network probably used video messages more frequently than any other terrorist organisation.
“They are in the habit of boasting about their attacks and using video messages is one of the characteristic methods of propaganda that they have developed, I would say more so than any other terrorist group,” said Prof Wilkinson, chairman of the centre for the study of terrorism and political violence at St Andrew’s University.
Hostage taking was not, however, seen as a major tactic of al Qaida, which has tended to focus on suicide and vehicle bombings, he added.
“Hostage taking has never been a major tactic ... but they seem to be moving towards that area now because of the present situation in Iraq,” he said.
Chilling video footage of three terrified blindfolded Japanese civilians who were kidnapped in southern Iraq was recently released by their captors in a bid to force Japan to pull its troops out of the country.
The images showed one of the male captives being threatened with a knife against his throat and a Japanese woman weeping as the masked kidnappers brandished their weapons.
The video was broadcast last month along with an ultimatum threatening to burn the journalist and two aid workers to death if Japan did not withdraw its troops within three days.
After the video was screened by Arabic TV station Al-Jazeera, Japan’s government said they had no plans to pull out of Iraq and the captives were later released.
Al-Jazeera was also condemned by Britain and the US for showing pictures of captives and dead bodies in breach of the Geneva Convention.
The footage apparently showed two dead British soldiers lying in the dust and two British PoWs during the Iraq war.
Videos of five captured US soldiers looking frightened and stoical were also broadcast by Al-Jazeera during the war.
The four men and a woman were thrust in front of a microphone and grilled by their Iraqi captors.
Prof Wilkinson said the use of video messages has long been popular with al Qaida leader Osama bin Laden.
Just three months after the September 11 terror attacks bin Laden issued a statement by video talking about the massacres.
The leader described the attacks against the US as “blessed” and talks about al Qaida’s aims “to stop American support for Israel, which kills our sons”.
In another tape, the terror mastermind is said to be seen laughing and boasting that the collapse of the World Trade Centre exceeded his expectations.
The recording apparently showed him grinning as he told guests at a dinner in Afghanistan that the suicide hijackers had only learned they were going to their deaths before they boarded the planes.
He told them how he had listened to the radio, waiting for news of the attacks, then celebrated afterwards with his “brothers”.
http://news.scotsman.com/latest.cfm?id=2911836
"All truth passes through three states," wrote Arthur Schopenhauer. "First it is ridiculed. Second, it is violently opposed. Third, it is accepted as being self-evident."
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