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- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 4
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- As a reporter covering the gulf war in January, Lara Marlowe
- saw jet fighters launched from an allied air base. In Iraq last
- week, she saw the sites they bombed. "I visited the landing
- strips, bridges and government ministries, as well as the
- blunders: for example, a water purification plant and a medical
- dispensary," she says. With Iraqi censorship lifted early this
- month, Marlowe was free to travel throughout the country. She
- found striking scenes: women in black robes carrying groceries
- through miles of rubble, a rusting merchant navy docked next to
- palm groves. Some of her experiences bordered on the surreal.
- In the southeastern city of Kut, the provincial governor handed
- her a white album filled with photographs of allied bomb damage.
- "The album's cover was embossed with letters that said, in
- English, MEMORY OF WEDDING."
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- Lara has seen the gulf war from all sides now. In February
- she entered Kuwait City with Saudi troops. "It was impossible
- to compare the destruction in Iraq with that in Kuwait -- and
- not conclude that Iraq fared much better," says Marlowe. The
- gulf war is not the first conflict that Marlowe has covered for
- TIME. Since 1989 she has lived in Beirut, where she reported the
- last throes of the Lebanese civil war. Born in Whittier,
- Calif., and educated at UCLA, the Sorbonne and Oxford, Lara
- previously worked in the Middle East for American and European
- newspapers and as an associate producer in Paris for CBS's 60
- Minutes.
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- One of the sad facts in Iraq, says Lara, is that even
- without censorship, most citizens remain fearful of speaking to
- reporters. "Many Iraqis refused to talk to me because I had no
- government `minder' with me," she says. Officials were equally
- reticent, frequently glancing at omnipresent portraits of Saddam
- Hussein as if seeking approval of their statements. Still, there
- were flashes of honesty. At a hospital in Basra, Marlowe asked
- a mother with a dying infant what had happened in the city.
- "She can't answer a question like that with all these people
- around," said the government interpreter. "Look at the pain in
- her eyes and you will see the answer." Says Marlowe: "I realized
- that only one man had the right to speak his mind in Iraq --
- Saddam Hussein."
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- -- Robert L. Miller
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