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- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 14
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- Christopher Morris and Anthony Suau knew they were in
- trouble when the Republican Guards stopped them at a shattered
- bridge on the outskirts of Basra. The two photographers, who
- were working for TIME, were headed for the Iraqi city to cover
- the fighting between government troops and insurgents in the
- wake of the gulf war. But the guardsmen seized Morris and Suau
- and more than 25 other journalists on March 3, a Sunday, and
- ransacked their cars. "It was as if we had walked into a den
- of 40 thieves," said Suau, 34. "Everything disappeared very
- quickly."
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- For the next six days, the group's captors shuttled the
- journalists from one site to another while deciding what to do
- with them, and the world wondered where they were. The first
- stop was Basra University, which was surrounded by tanks and
- artillery and swarming with Iraqi troops. Soldiers herded all
- the hostages into a small room furnished with two beds and half
- a dozen broken television sets. The weary journalists spent the
- night without food, water or much sleep, as rifle fire barked
- outside their windows and artillery rockets screamed overhead.
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- Fearing that the location was too dangerous, the Iraqis
- moved the hostages to a red brick barracks outside Basra, where
- they were confined to a bare, partly underground room. "I
- didn't think they would kill us," said Morris, 32. "But I
- worried that they would hold us for two weeks or a month. My
- big concern was food and sanitary conditions." Their daily diet
- was a piece of chicken and a slice of stale bread. That was
- more than their guards got. "They said we were guests," Morris
- added. "They didn't like the word prisoners."
-
- By Thursday the Iraqis were ready to hand over the hostages
- to the Red Cross in Baghdad. But fierce civil warfare made all
- roads to the capital unsafe. So helicopters flew the group from
- Basra to Baghdad, dodging flares and tracer fire along the
- three-hour flight. In Baghdad, the Red Cross treated the
- famished journalists to what Suau called "our first really good
- meal in six days" before busing them to Jordan, where they were
- released. "The ironic thing," Morris recalls, "is that we went
- from Dhahran to Kuwait City to Basra to Baghdad to Amman, and
- not one roll of film to show for it." We regret that too, but
- we've settled happily for having the pair safely out of Iraq.
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- -- Robert L. Miller
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