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- <text id=92TT2822>
- <title>
- Dec. 21, 1992: From the Publisher
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Dec. 21, 1992 Restoring Hope
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 4
- </hdr><body>
- <p> Getting a story out of Africa is never easy, but this week's
- cover package posed a special challenge for the veteran Africa
- hands in TIME's Nairobi bureau--operations central for our
- correspondents in Somalia. Not only did the army of print and
- video journalists descending on Mogadishu fill every available
- hotel room and airplane seat, but they also emptied neighboring
- capitals of supplies. While our resourceful office manager,
- Grace Okeyo, scoured Nairobi for bottled water and U.S.
- currency (a commodity in increasingly short supply), Nairobi
- reporter Clive Mutiso pulled every string he knew to get TIME
- space on planes denied to other journalists. When former Nairobi
- bureau chief James Wilde flew in from Istanbul, Mutiso persuaded
- a charter pilot bound for Mogadishu to add one more passenger,
- even though there were no more seats on his airplane. In the
- end, says Mutiso, Wilde was stowed "like a big parcel" behind
- the pilot, and off they went.
- </p>
- <p> Wilde, a seasoned war correspondent who has been dodging
- bullets since the French Indochina war, landed in time to
- witness the media circus that greeted the troops on the beach.
- "The Marines showed admirable restraint," says Wilde. He tells
- the story of one U.S. trooper, faced with a particularly
- irritating photographer who refused to obey orders to lie down
- and keep quiet, finally fingering the trigger of his M-16 and
- asking his gunnery sergeant in a whisper, "Shall I blow him
- away?" The answer was no. All journalists, even experienced ones
- like Wilde, have been bedeviled by kat-chewing thugs, pesky
- mosquitoes and static-stricken telephone lines. "Nearly every
- correspondent has his story of being robbed at gunpoint, usually
- by preteen kids," reports Wilde.
- </p>
- <p> Acting Nairobi bureau chief Andrew Purvis, who inherited
- Wilde's mongrel dogs, Whiskey and Pee Wee, along with his old
- job, has been in Mogadishu long enough to watch the city go from
- outright anarchy to "a place that almost feels safe." Bringing
- peace to Somalia's interior, however, may take some doing. In
- Baidoa, Purvis saw a young Somali no more than eight years old
- waltz up to a relief worker who was carrying a bag of
- cheese-flavored chips. "The kid had an AK-47 draped over his
- shoulder, its muzzle almost dragging in the dust," says Purvis.
- While Purvis watched, the pint-size gunman reached up and
- snatched the bag of chips. A Somali man standing nearby yelled
- at him, but the child, who was much better armed and knew it,
- just stared and walked away.
- </p>
- <p> Elizabeth P. Valk
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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