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Prix Bayeux – Frontline Club http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com Championing Independent Journalism Fri, 15 Nov 2013 10:54:54 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Twenty Years of War Reporting: “A good moment for us is often the worst for them” http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/twenty-years-of-war-reporting-a-good-moment-for-us-is-often-the-worst-for-them/ http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/twenty-years-of-war-reporting-a-good-moment-for-us-is-often-the-worst-for-them/#respond Fri, 15 Nov 2013 10:36:22 +0000 http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/?p=38567 By Caroline Schmitt

In October the Frontline Club held a tenth anniversary exhibition at the Prix Bayeux Awards and on 13 November they welcomed Prix Bayeux to London for an event to celebrate their twentieth anniversary. The event brought together past winners who each presented their distinguished pieces of reporting and looked back on 20 years of reporting conflict.

The evening was opened by Jon Swain, award winning journalist and guest president of the Prix Bayeux jury, who explained how the awards are very much about the work produced rather than, as is often the case, who knows who. The discussion was chaired by Frontline Club founder and 2011 Bayeux-Calvados award winner, Vaughan Smith.

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L-R Vaughan Smith, Adrien Jaulmes, Neil Connery, Christina Lamb and Jeremy Bowen

Jeremy Bowen, BBC Middle East editor and winner of the award in 2009 for reporting on the aftermath of the 2009 Gaza War for BBC1’s Panorama. He accompanied a doctor from Gaza who lost several daughters and a niece in an Israeli shelling, the terrible irony being that he had spent a lot of his career working for peace with Israel:

“I went around the room and he told me where they were laying. I thought that if I’d put it in a more factual manner, it would have more impact. It worked out in that sense but as ever, one of the ambivalences [of war reporting] is that we report on the back of someone else’s tragedy.”

Christina Lamb, author and journalist with The Sunday Times and winner of the award in 2009, read from Mission Impossible, an account of her time as an embedded journalist with the British military in Afghanistan. Mentioning the Green Book that requires reporters to have their copy pre-approved by military press officers, Lamb reflected:

“There’s a fine line between that and censorship. We [journalists] failed because we should have gotten up against it, all of us.”

Prix Bayeux exhibited photographs from winners of the award during the evening. [Caroline Schmitt]

Prix Bayeux exhibited photographs from previous winners of the award during the evening. [picture credit: Caroline Schmitt]

Neil Connery, correspondent for ITV News and winner of the award in 2006, pointed the discussion towards the challenge of providing safety for locals:

“The vast majority of people involved in news-gathering who are injured or killed are locals to that country. They’re not only journalists, but drivers, translators. . . . We as an industry have a huge moral responsibility for those people and I wonder whether we really deliver that as much as we need to.”

Adrien Jaulmes, reporter with Le Figaro and winner of the Bayeux-Calvados award in 2007, he said of reporting in Syria:

“Your moral duty is to share the dangers while you’re there. Journalists suddenly become the targets in big cities because they have money, and that changed the game for us within weeks.”

Watch and listen back here:

https://soundcloud.com/frontlineclub/twenty-years-of-war-reporting

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Twenty Years of War Reporting with Prix Bayeux http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/twenty-years-of-war-reporting-with-prix-bayeux/ http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/twenty-years-of-war-reporting-with-prix-bayeux/#respond Thu, 03 Oct 2013 11:23:56 +0000 http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/?p=36791 Jeremy Bowen, BBC Middle East Editor; Christina Lamb, author and journalist with The Sunday Times; Neil Connery, correspondent for ITV News; Adrien Jaulmes, reporter with Le Figaro; and Vaughan Smith, Frontline Club founder.]]>

https://soundcloud.com/frontlineclub/twenty-years-of-war-reporting
Following our tenth anniversary exhibition at the Prix Bayeux Awards in October, we are very pleased to welcome Prix Bayeux to the Frontline Club to celebrate their twentieth anniversary.

They will be bringing together a panel of their laureates, to present and talk about their work, and discuss the changes we have seen in 20 years of war reporting.

Chaired by Vaughan Smith, Frontline Club founder, video journalist and winner of the Bayeux-Calvados award in 2011 for Grand Format Television.

With:

Jeremy Bowen, BBC Middle East Editor and winner of the Bayeux-Calvados award in 2009 for Grand Format Television and in 2012 for radio.

Christina Lamb, author and journalist with The Sunday Times. She received the Bayeux-Calvados award for Written press in 2009.

Adrien Jaulmes, reporter with Le Figaro and winner of the Bayeux-Calvados award for Written press in 2007.

Neil Connery is a correspondent for ITV News. Previously he has been Africa and Moscow Correspondent. He won the Bayeux-Calvados award for Television in 2006.

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