Stop the War Protest – (24.10.09)
October 26th, 2009

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LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM – 24.10.09. Anti-war protesters march from Hyde Park to Trafalgar Square for a rally on Saturday 24 October 2009 in London, England. The Stop the War Coalition called for the withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan. (Photo by Marc Vallee/marcvallee.co.uk) (c) Marc Vallée, 2009.

Link : Click here to view more images.

Clients : Images are available for rights managed editorial licensing. High resolution images are available on request.

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LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM – 24.10.09. 104-year-old Hetty Bower joins anti-war protesters in Hyde Park before marching to Trafalgar Square for a rally on Saturday 24 October 2009 in London, England. The Stop the War Coalition called for the withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan. (Photo by Marc Vallee/marcvallee.co.uk) (c) Marc Vallée, 2009.


Guy Smallman back from Afghanistan – With a World Exclusive
June 25th, 2009

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HERAT CITY , AFGHANISTAN – Noria Barkot with her father. She was injured in the attack on Granai Village. Published here by kind permission of Guy Smallman/guysmallman.com. (c) Guy Smallman, 2009.

“The enemy has the momentum in Afghanistan”Channel 4 News.

“The innocent are always caught up”Channel 4 News.

“New footage of deadly Afghan bombing”Channel 4 News.

“Villagers’ legacy of pain from US air raid” – Guy Smallman, Financial Times.

“Afghans’ legacy of pain from US air raid” – Guy Smallman, Financial Times.

My friend and colleague Guy Smallman is back from working in Afghanistan – and with a world exclusive. He visited the Afghan village of Granai in which a US air strike killed 147 civilians in May of this year, the highest number of civilian casualties since the Afghanistan conflict began. Click on the links above to read Guy’s report and view his pictures and to watch the Channel 4 News report as well – which was the lead story last night.

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GRANAI, AFGHANISTAN – On May 4th 2009 Granai Village in the Bala Baluk area of Farah province was the subject of air strikes by Coalition Forces. 147 civilians were killed making the single biggest loss of life since the war began in 2001. Published here by kind permission of Guy Smallman/guysmallman.com. (c) Guy Smallman, 2009.

Below is Guy’s previous investigation from Afghanistan – which was published in the Financial Times magazine in December last year.

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Publication: 6/7 December 2008, Financial Times magazine.

“The Afghan man squatting in front of us in the former Soviet cultural centre in Kabul was oblivious to our presence. In his right hand he clung to a scorched piece of tinfoil. He was about 20, and rocked slowly backwards and forwards, not registering the questions being put to him by Khalid, my interpreter. Eventually we gave up, leaving him to his heroin-induced daze amid the rubble and used syringes. Lenin looked down from a decaying mural behind him.”

“Kabul’s lost tribe” – Guy Smallman, Financial Times.

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Publication: 6/7 December 2008, Financial Times magazine.

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Publication: 6/7 December 2008, Financial Times magazine.


Hizb ut-Tahrir – Protest – (31.05.09)
June 4th, 2009

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LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM – 31.05.09. Members of Hizb ut-Tahrir – a right-wing Islamist political party – congregate in London to protest against US intervention in Pakistan and Afghanistan on Saturday 31 May 2009 in London, England. The protesters marched from the US Embassy to the High Commission for Pakistan calling for the creation of a single Islamic state under a single Caliphate. (Photo by Marc Vallée/marcvallee.co.uk) (c) Marc Vallée, 2009.

Link : Click here to view more images.

Clients : Images are available for rights managed editorial licensing. High resolution images are available on request.


Guy Smallman in Afghanistan.
October 23rd, 2008

Today we hand over the Blog to photojournalist Guy Smallman on his very personal account of a visit to the accident and emergency room at a Kabul hospital in Afghanistan last month.


KABUL, AFGHANISTAN – September 2008. Photojournalist Guy Smallman being treated at a hospital in Kabul, Afghanistan September 2008.  Published here by kind permission of Guy Smallman 2008.  (c) Guy Smallman 2008.

“I got injured on a shoot in Afghanistan.”  Sounds dramatic, but the reality was actually quite mundane.  Our car slid of a gravel road in one of Kabul’s suburbs.  A back-wheel drive, the rear right hand tyre was spinning in a pothole unable to get the grip required to move the vehicle forward.  So we kicked a selection of rocks and pebbles into the hole and got behind to push.  As the driver hit the gas the wheel spun one of the rocks straight into my shin and in a moment my trousers, trainer and sock were covered in claret pissing out of a deep cut.

Ghani my interpreter insisted that we go to a local hospital to get the wound properly cleaned and stitched.  I needed little persuasion after he went on to say that infections here often led to amputation.

A jovial Afghan Doctor commended my bravery as he snipped some fatty tissue from the wound and deep cleaned it with iodine solution.  I pointed out through Ghani that my failure to register any pain was due to the massive nerve damage sustained to my leg on a job in 2003.  The Doctor surveyed the 5 year old blast injury to the rear of my calf and asked if I got it here? Or maybe somewhere like Palestine? Or Iraq?  I then had to explain that I was blown off my feet in Switzerland by a Police concussion grenade while covering an anti G8 protest.

Immediately I became the laughing stock of Kabul A&E as the nurses, porters and even some of the other patients relatives filed through my room to laugh at the funny Englishman who got injured by an explosion in a country that has been at peace for 500 years.  As if I didn’t already have enough reasons to hate the cops in Geneva…

Note: And back in the UK Guy bitten by a police attack dog which required medical attention when covering a protest last week.


World Press Photo of the Year
February 13th, 2008

Today we hand over the Blog to award winning photographer Sion Touhig who has worked for UK and international newspapers and magazines since 1991, covering stories such as the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and strife in the Balkans and Palestine. Sion gives us his views on this years World Press Photo Award and related issues.

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WORLD PRESS PHOTO of the Year 2007. Tim Hetherington, UK, for Vanity Fair. American soldier resting at bunker, Korengal Valley, Afghanistan, 16 September. Published here by kind permission of World Press Photo.

It’s World Press Photo award time again, and like nearly every year, the winning image (this time by Tim Hetherington) has caused all kinds of ructions around and about.

To be honest, the only decent response is to congratulate all the winners, but it’s worth remembering the contest is called not the World Photo Award, but the World Press Photo award. It’s ultimately pointless elevating one image to encapsulate a whole years news, but some of the criticisms do have some validity, in that journalism seems to have been often displaced in favour of aesthetic concerns at the WPP.

Aesthetics needn’t outweigh journalistic enquiry, you can have both – but Paul Melchers blog argument is that in a competition which is concerned with press photography, you’d assume the judges would be looking for an image that satisfied both pictorial and journalistic concerns.

I think the winning image is intriguing, but it doesn’t really tell me anything I don’t already know – and perhaps even tells me less about whats going on.

The blurred image clearly shows a US soldier at the end of his tether but because of what? In Afghanistan, the largest military power in history is putting huge efforts into bending one of the poorest nations on Earth to it’s will.

Yet by viewing this image I’m supposed to empathise with the more powerful party and to shrug off the growing and largely unaccounted civilian casualties caused by their activities.

Pictures like these (and the story its taken from) construct a developing consensus narrative about Afghanistan and Iraq, in the same way a media/popular culture consensus was constructed about Vietnam that it was a tragedy for the US only, instead of what it really was – the military might of the Worlds most powerful nation, laying waste to a poor country and slaughtering its civilian population, for ultimately futile strategic aims.

Perhaps that sounds familiar? It probably will to average Afghans, as they endure the consequences of yet another superpowers ‘boots on the ground‘.

With neither present UK or future US political leaders talking about military withdrawal, I don’t think its acceptable any longer to uncritically look at military images taken in Afghanistan or Iraq, and celebrate them simply on the sole aesthetic grounds that they carry on the pictorial legacy of Robert Capa.

The D-Day troops depicted by Capa on Omaha Beach were doing something markedly different to what US troops did in Vietnam, and are doing now in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Robert Capa’s blurred photographs of soldiers at their tethers end, shoulder-deep in seawater amidst withering gunfire, were arguably images of liberators, and Capa had recognised and documented anti-Fascist struggle a damn sight earlier than most. His lover, Gerda Taro, died recording it.

As repugnant as Qutbism is, it simply does not present the same dire existential threat that Nazism posed in June 1944, and whatever threat of Islamic militancy that exists now, has been increased, not lessened, by the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan.

The context of these current conflicts and WWII is very different, but the photographic depiction often, is not.

In many examples of contemporary photojournalism from Afghanistan and Iraq, deeply embedded (excuse the pun) pictorial motifs of liberation and sacrifice are being used to either endorse, ignore or excuse economic and military imperialism.

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AN AFGHAN woman passes through a Northern Alliance frontline position. The woman and other refugees are fleeing US aerial bombing of Taliban fighters around Khanabad and Kunduz. Northern Afghanistan, 18th Nov 2001. Photo by Sion Touhig. Published here by kind permission of Sion Touhig.