Program Note: Christiane Amanpour introduces you to the courageous few who saw evil and tried to stop the killing. December 4, 9 p.m. ET
Christiane Amanpour | BIO
CNN International Correspondent
No one teaches reporters how to cover a war, much less wars that include genocide. Most of us rely on the wisdom of experienced colleagues and a lot of on-the-job training.
My first war assignment - Bosnia, in the 1990s - included visits to the Sarajevo morgue to see the bodies. How else would a journalist know exactly how many Muslim children were cut down by Bosnian Serb snipers? How else could we put names to civilians left faceless by mortar shells from the surrounding hills? I learned what it means to bear witness.
I found my voice and my mission in Bosnia. I learned to seek the facts, to tell the truth no matter how difficult or unpopular. I learned that objectivity meant covering all sides and giving all sides their hearing, but never to draw a false moral equivalence when none exists. I learned never to equate victims with their aggressors. I learned that there are limits to the style of journalism that goes: "On the one hand, on the other hand."
Most of all, I learned that as reporters our words and our actions have consequences and that we must use this powerful platform, television, responsibly.
But how many times have people asked me, when I've come back from a place like Bosnia or Rwanda: Is it really that bad? I have found that many people want to believe that I am exaggerating. I guess they do not want to believe such evil can exist. Or perhaps they just do not want to be pushed into that moral space where they would have to take a stand and do something.
| Melissa, Los Angeles |
December 4th, 2008 6:14 pm ET I'm completely baffled as to why the Clinton administration did nothing against the Bosnian Serbs. How can our government allow the slaughter in Rwanda and Darfur? After the Holocaust I would think this country would do everything possible to prevent such terror from happening again yet those 3 instances prove that this country and others still have learned nothing. |
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| Joanne, Solvay, NY |
December 4th, 2008 6:54 pm ET What can we actually do to prevent such attrocity? We tried to become the "world police"...and now, we pay with the ruined lives of our fighting men and women, injury, lasting psychological problems, our failing economy....These issues belong to the world, not just the USA. I don't blame our presidents, past and present, my eyes turn to the UN. |
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| jim |
December 4th, 2008 7:59 pm ET We should not have even gone to Bosnia. The developed countries in Europe should have got involved. After all, it is in their own back yard. I don't have all the facts but it is possible the Bosnian Serbs were justified. After all Christiane Amanpour muslims are causing 95% of terrorists attacks. I do believe they killed innocent women and children. I guess it is acceptable for them to do this. I definitely wouldn't turn my back on them. The United Nations should address the Rwanda crisis. They can use military from developed countries in Europe for what little military they have. The US should just provide logisitics support. |
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| pati mc., camp hill, pa |
December 4th, 2008 8:02 pm ET Christiane, For years I have held you above all reporters and in my very highest esteem. It is quite simply for this very reason: "Most of all, I learned that as reporters our words and our actions have consequences and that we must use this powerful platform, television, responsibly." If only more would follow your lead. Anxiously I await "Scream Bloody Murder" later this evening. Thank you for your dedication to the most horrid and difficult subjects and continued health and sucess to you in the future. |
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| Max |
December 4th, 2008 8:05 pm ET I think a LOT of people don't BELIEVE things unless they see it or KNOW it first hand ... People are desensitized by various forms of MEDIA including movies. |
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| Minou, New York City |
December 4th, 2008 8:31 pm ET "..perhaps they just don't want to be pushed into that moral space where they would have to take a stand and do something." It's a lot more convenient to ignore the problems of the world than realizing we are all responsible for one another. Regardless of how far apart we live, in the end, we are all one, and what one person does affects all others. |
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| Texas |
December 4th, 2008 9:09 pm ET Christiane Amanpour, you are incredibly brave; your work is not in vain. |
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| Shannon |
December 4th, 2008 9:27 pm ET As I watched the special I was struck by a thought that was a little disturbing to me but worth mentioning....It seemed to me that Genocide was a little like a forest fire....almost a way of thinning out a population or so to speak. I know it's a Terrible thing and should Never happen under any condition and that the people responsible are evil and unstable, I just thought there were weird parallels. |
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| Tammy, Berwick. LA |
December 4th, 2008 11:32 pm ET Thank you for continuing to shed light on these atrocities. On Tuesday I showed the map and slides from this program to my high school freshmen. They are reading Night for me and had recently watched Hotel Rwanda in another course, but it still wasn't sinking in for some. When they saw the slides from Bosnia and Rwanda and Darfur and realized these events happened during their lifetime, it became real for them finally. They asked hard questions, many that have no answers. And they began thinking about right and wrong in humanity in a way they haven't before. We can never forget, and education and remembrance are the keys. This was one amazing way to accomplish that. |
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| Jen |
December 5th, 2008 2:07 am ET Christiane, |
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| MULGA |
December 5th, 2008 2:44 am ET I have been watching the fabulous presentation by Cristiane Amanpaur about the "screaming Bloody Murder" – Genocide. In this instance something strike me when I heard from Christiane the word "BUTROS BUTROS GALI" The then Secretary of United nations . It remind me that Mr. Gali (I am not sure if I spelled his name correctly) was the worst, incompetent, inupt sectetafry ever since the United Nations Organzation came into existence. Genocide, war, coruption, unrest, hunger, disease etc. took place all over the world in his era. Farther more, his atemptd to pullout the United Nation's pease keepers from Ruwanda while slaughtering process under way on Ruwandan citizens but failed when the refusal of the then hero General, Chief Commander of the Pease Keepers, to do so. This shows that his characterstics that he is decieved racist criminal. There fore, he is responsible for victims of criminal activities, hunger, disease, and human rights violations int the world under his watch during his reign. Finally, I like to appreciate Cristiane Amanpour for her dedication bringing into attention these international crisises. Thank you! |
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| Ilhana, Bosnia |
December 5th, 2008 2:56 am ET Christiane Amanpour is a bright light in the world of journalism, and has done tremendous job in informing the Western world about the genocide in Bosnia. In response to jim's theories – Bosnian Serbs were NOT justified – they wanted to exterminate Bosniaks in their own country Bosnia, following the split between countries of former Yugoslavia (where Bosnian nation was always denied and put under a Serb-Croat rug). If you need proof of that, please visit Srebrenica and thousands and thousands of graves there, Sarajevo, and thousands upon thousands of graves there, Bosanska Krupa, Foča and all other cities, towns and villages in Bosnia. They all bear the horrible mark of genocide. Please inform yourself before you state that the slaughtering, raping, wounding, sniper killing, mutilating innocent men, women and children, sieges was somehow "justified"! p.s. People who commit terrorist attacks are not true followers of any faith, so please don't equal Muslims with those extremist groups. |
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| Hakan S. |
December 5th, 2008 3:23 am ET This was a great program, but it failed to include another genocide that took place right here in U.S.A... The killings of the Native Indians for their land and locking them into reservation camps! I don't feel good about realizing that my ancestors might have been capable of killing innocent Armenians during 1900 century. But it is unfair to blame younger generations for crimes committed by previous generations. This is not the way to achieve reconciliation. |
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| Anna, HK |
December 5th, 2008 8:12 am ET Thank you for your report on Genocide, showing a face of the world that many of us definitely would not see in reality. Highlighting the importance to recognise the early signs when evil is happening & put a halt to it. There is evil in the world, but I believe that good & hope will triumph over evil.., a time when the world will see heroes... discerning individuals that will see what is happening & tell the world that it must be stopped. |
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