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"I have seen a lot of foreign correspondents
get totally freaked out by being called back home. There is a
kind of freedom to being an expatriate... The freedom and the
ability to reinvent yourself I think psychologically is something
that keeps foreign correspondents overseas."
Barbara Demick - Los Angeles Times (Seoul, South Korea)
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| "People
don't understand how hard life is in this part of the world. The
simplest of things like making a phone call or taking a sick child
to a doctor... Getting a government document can be a nightmare
here; it can take days or it could not happen at all."
Terry Friel - Reuters (New Delhi, India)
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| "Sometimes it can be a little overwhelming
when one thing happens in the Middle East and you get three different
interpretations, three different spins. Trying to sift through
that and come up with a comprehensive story that goes right down
the middle sometimes can be challenging."
Janine Zacharia - Jerusalem Post (Washington, D.C.)
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| "I would be lying if I didn't say that
there is a sort of boys' own juvenile adventure sort of ethic
that sweeps through war correspondents, being around big machinery
and guns and things that go boom... For a long time I had a very
rather juvenile ambition that I wanted to get shot at."
Alex Perry - Time magazine (New Delhi, India)
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| "An inexperienced young girl is not
the kind of person you'd expect to report the opening of World
War II."
Clare Hollingworth, describing her work on the Polish-German
border in 1939 for the Daily Telegraph
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| "I think
I have one quality that has really stood me in good stead as a
reporter, and that's being relentless. I think it's all very good
to be intelligent and know languages and do research and have
a certain amount of charm. But I don't think anything trumps being
relentless."
Ann Louise Bardach - journalist and author on Cuba
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| "While journalists are very good at
criticizing the way in which the world works, thank God they don't
run it."
Thomas Crampton - International Herald Tribune (Hong
Kong, China)
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| "You can
never please everybody, I mean the biggest bitches are the people
in the press corps, always!"
Hugh van Es - photojournalist (Hong Kong, China)
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| "[In] a world without media, people
would be completely in the dark. The only thing they would hear
is what the politicians tell them. A world just run by politicians,
it would be a world where the ordinary people would never have
a chance to know what the truth is... The best thing media can
do is bring light to people, they can never bring truth to people,
never objectivity, but they can try to bring light into this darkness."
Charles Ritterband - Neue Zuercher Zeitung (Vienna,
Austria)
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| "I used to think that
covering war was terrifically exciting. But after you've covered
it for a while, after you have gone to one village after another
and seen one refugee camp after another, and after you have these
experiences seeing people who have been killed, you sort of wonder,
are you exploiting their suffering? You feel like you are exploiting
their suffering. I began to feel, what was I doing here and what
was all this about?"
Don Kirk - International Herald Tribune (Seoul,
South Korea)
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| "I was interested in taking risks,
of doing things that sometimes maybe other people didn't do."
Gary Marx - Chicago Tribune (Havana correspondent)
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| "The greater dangers [of foreign reporting]
are to the family life and how it kind of wrecks it. You risk
chasing too hard and not paying enough attention to those who
need your love and your warmth and your care. You are too busy
chasing the big story."
Bryan Pearson - Agence France-Presse (New Delhi,
India)
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