photos

You are currently browsing articles tagged photos.

It didn’t take long before Taliban insurgents, in typical fashion, made their voices heard regarding Afghan President Hamid Karzai’s National Consultative Peace Jirga.

There were some 2,000 of us under a massive tent at the Polytechnic University in the western part of Kabul Wednesday morning:  1,600 delegates, members of the media and assorted foreign dignitaries.  (Some of my media colleagues came in late because:  1. we had to sit on the buses forever before the drivers took us to the event and 2. organizers split us into small groups for the long and thorough security process.)

Early in Mr. Karzai’s speech to open the three-day peace assembly, an explosion sounded outside the tent, briefly interrupting the president.  Watch how the situation evolved (also, click here for more info, along with my immediate phone interview with VOA’s Sarah Williams):

Everyone reacted calmly to the initial rocket, but the situation changed after President Karzai’s speech.

As my colleagues and I scrambled to conduct interviews with delegates outside the main tent, a piercing whistle sounded directly overhead.  My initial thought in the split second I heard the sound was “fireworks,” but then logic quickly hit me.  Instantly, I grabbed the camera and tripod (despite my interviewee still being attached by microphone), ducked and looked up, but by that time, we heard the explosion.

I understand that this rocket exploded closer than the first one.  Below is the picture I captured from the media center overlooking the jirga campus. 

The long white structure in the middle is the main jirga tent.  I’m told that the second rocket exploded near the outer green fence, close to the guard tower.

As you can see in my video above, jirga organizers were quick to usher journalists out, much to the amusement of delegates walking calmly among us.

It was a constant battle:  us journalists trying to talk to delegates and shoot video of the exterior of the event, and organizers and Afghan security forces rushing us away.

You could argue they were doing it for our safety.  Which is no doubt true… up to a point.  Once they took us outside the barricades of the jirga campus, they left us standing in the middle of a completely exposed parking lot.  The handful of Afghan policemen there seemed pretty unconcerned by the gunfire ringing out down the street.

I will give the organizers this though… while the buses took some time to show up, the drivers felt no need to hang around.

  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

A VOA colleague and I were traveling this morning to Rawalpindi to meet with a high-level official at the Inter Services Public Relations office.  The office is located on the premises of the Pakistani Army’s headquarters in a high-security area.

Our meeting was scheduled for noon, and as we got closer to the ISPR offices, we kept getting stuck in traffic.

A military official called my colleague and said there was a loud bang and then gunfire around the premises.  We then called an assistant to the official we were going to meet, and he said that they were stuck in the office because there was shooting going on outside.

By that time, we had talked our way through several security checkpoints and arrived about 200 meters from the scene.

Click here to see how the story evolved.

These are images that I captured:

  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,