Skip to main content

Syrian state TV broadcasts 'confession' by detained citizen journalist

By the CNN Wire Staff
May 5, 2012 -- Updated 1805 GMT (0205 HKT)
British photographer Paul Conroy said Ali Mahmoud Othman helped him escape from Baba Amr following the death of Marie Colvin
British photographer Paul Conroy said Ali Mahmoud Othman helped him escape from Baba Amr following the death of Marie Colvin
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • NEW: Abu Othman may well have been speaking under duress, Reporters Without Borders says
  • Citizen journalist Ali Mahmoud Othman helped foreign journalists in the city of Homs
  • Activists fear Othman may have been tortured since he was detained in March
  • Foreign news outlets have been severely restricted in reporting on Syria's yearlong crackdown

(CNN) -- Syrian state TV aired Saturday what it said was a confession by citizen journalist Ali Mahmoud Othman, who activists say was arrested in March after he helped foreign journalists escape from the besieged city of Homs.

Othman helped run a media center in Baba Amr area of Homs, which provided information to international news media during a months-long crackdown on the civilian neighborhood by government forces.

Reporters Without Borders, the journalist watchdog group, said last month it was "extremely concerned" for the life of Othman after his detention.

Othman was transferred to Damascus two days after his arrest by the intelligence services in Aleppo on March 28, the group said.

Activists fear he may have been subjected to torture in detention.

Rafiq Lutf, described as a Syrian media researcher, told the state TV program he had spoken to Othman for seven hours uninterrupted, all of it videotaped.

Fears grow for missing Syria activists
Key Syrian activist arrested
Crackdown in Syria

His subject states his name is "Ali Othman aka Al-Jid from Baba Amr of Homs. I work as photography director and live streaming with Khalid Abu Salah at the media center. I communicate with the satellite channels, on top of them Al Jazeera, Arabiya, CNN, BBC, Sky News and Turkish channel TRT."

In the interview Othman describes how the media operation was set up in Baba Amr, and talks about demonstrations and the role of armed groups.

It is unclear under what circumstances the interview was taped.

But Heather Blake, UK representative for Reporters Without Borders, said: "Research by our organization and many other organizations indicates that many human rights defenders who are detained have been shown to give false confessions under much duress and torture.

"We would advise anyone watching this to be very aware of that fact. The fact that Othman was arrested after committing no crime would suggest that he is speaking under duress."

Reporters Without Borders calls for Othman's release and for justice to be served, Blake said.

Foreign news outlets have been severely limited during the government's bloody year-long crackdown against protesters. Critics say that the government has been dutifully working to stifle such independent reporting.

Amateur videographers and news reporters dubbed "citizen journalists" have braved violence to undermine the government's news coverage restrictions.

They have helped those international journalists who were able to sneak into Syria and report. And they have produced videos, photos and print reports every day that bear witness to the brutal crackdown.

Woes mount in Syria as UN mission grows
Head of U.N. mission arrives in Syria
U.N. response in Syria mocked

Those reports have helped news outlets around the world tell the story of the violence.

Speaking shortly after Othman's arrest, Paul Conroy, a British photographer who was injured in the Baba Amr offensive, said the regime was taking steps "to ensure that independent reporting becomes impossible."

He said Othman helped him escape from Baba Amr, hammered for weeks by the military until resistance fighters retreated. Activists say other parts of the city continue to be shelled.

"After the attack and treatment of the wounded he played a significant role in assisting in our escape from Baba Amr. All our efforts must now be concentrated on saving his life. If it wasn't for him, no Western media would have been able to work in Baba Amr and bear witness to the slaughter of the civilian population," Conroy said.

The team that worked with Othman in Baba Amr has been pushing for the release of Othman and other detained activists.

Reporters Without Borders has also called for their release.

"Citizen journalists whose only crimes are to have witnessed, filmed and photographed acts of violence by a regime that persists in its deadly folly are being hunted down, arrested, tortured and murdered," the group said in a statement last month.

"We hold the Syrian authorities responsible for whatever may happen to them. The regime is more determined than ever to suppress all information about its crackdown. Syria has become a hell for both professional and citizen journalists."

A peace plan brokered by international envoy Kofi Annan last month calls on Syria to ensure freedom of movement for journalists in the country.

An apparent violation occurred this week when Sky News, a British broadcaster, said Syrian officials confiscated a television camera after a crew filmed an impromptu protest in Damascus.

CNN's Hamdi Alkhshali and Laura Smith-Spark contributed to this report.

ADVERTISEMENT
Part of complete coverage on
Syrian crisis
June 17, 2013 -- Updated 1036 GMT (1836 HKT)
Snipers are doing most of the fighting in one war-torn Damascus suburb in Syria. CNN's Fred Pleitgen finds that death can come any minute.
There's more to the Syrian civil war than rebels versus the regime. Syria's neighbors in the Middle East also have a stake in the conflict.
June 14, 2013 -- Updated 2033 GMT (0433 HKT)
The U.S. confirmed that Syria crossed a "red line" by using chemical weapons in its war with rebel forces.
June 14, 2013 -- Updated 2118 GMT (0518 HKT)
The Syrian government condemns U.S. allegations that it used chemical weapons, as CNN's Frederik Pleitgen reports.
May 30, 2013 -- Updated 0036 GMT (0836 HKT)
CNN's Nick Paton Walsh reports on the desperation inside a Syrian town under siege and one doctor trying to make a difference.
May 27, 2013 -- Updated 2308 GMT (0708 HKT)
Syrian rebels take position in a house during clashes with regime forces in the old city of Aleppo on May 22, 2013.
Mouaz Moustafa, who helped plan McCain's trip to Syria, discusses details of the trip with CNN's Wolf Blitzer.
May 16, 2013 -- Updated 1737 GMT (0137 HKT)
The horrifying video of a Syrian rebel leader apparently eating the heart of a dead government soldier caused a storm of disgust on social media.
May 10, 2013 -- Updated 0944 GMT (1744 HKT)
The conflict in Syria entered a new phase -- one that threatens to embroil its neighbors in a chaotic way.
May 21, 2013 -- Updated 1129 GMT (1929 HKT)
Exiled Syrian cartoonist, whose hands were broken in an attempt to end his craft, says pens have the power to topple dictators.
Are you in Syria? Share your stories, videos and photos with the world on CNN iReport, but please stay safe.
ADVERTISEMENT