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Damascus, December 2018. Two great independent journalists sit down together:
Eva Bartlett and Vanessa Beeley
Eva Bartlett: ‘when
I arrived on the 29th (of December 2018) I was told that, aside from
yourself (gestures to Vanessa Beeley), I was the only other western
journalist in Syria. And it struck me not so much as surprising, in fact
it’s more expected, that corporate media journalists could very well be
here, but they’re not.’
Vanessa Beeley:
‘Well, there’s been silence in the media about what is effectively a
victory for Syria, for the secularism of Syria against extremism and
persecution and tyranny.’
***
In
April 2017 I made my first trip to Syria because of these two inspiring
women. Having been awakened to the bias, distortion and outright lies
of the corporate media for
many years I had found others who shared my anger and frustration and had done my best through online campaigning an
d writing to
challenge those who dare call them journalists but who obediently,
enthusiastically and willfully amplify the narrative fed them by their
official sources. Their stenography has abetted the murderous wars that
have killed, literally, millions of innocent people and it is no slander
to accuse these media criminals of having blood on their hands. And
when it comes to Syria, the blood stains on those corporate journalists’
hands can never be washed away.
many years I had found others who shared my anger and frustration and had done my best through online campaigning an
I
didn’t trust mainstream media reports, of course, when they first
talked of an ‘uprising’ in Syria and a ‘brutal’ crackdown by the
government, but thanks to Vanessa Beeley (image right) and Eva
Bartlett (image leftand their, sometimes, life-risking efforts to bring
the truth out of Syria, I realised just how poi
soned the dark pool of propaganda against this sovereign nation actually was, and as time went on it was brought home to me, as I watched corporate journalists reporting from Beirut befo
re introducing the latest White Helmet fictional
production, that as an independent journalist myself, I simply had to
go to Syria and report first-hand on what I found there. My co-editor
at BSNews, Mike Raddie,
made the first journey for our website, in 2016 when I had been unable
to join him, but in 2017 we both made the trip which was to change my
life.
soned the dark pool of propaganda against this sovereign nation actually was, and as time went on it was brought home to me, as I watched corporate journalists reporting from Beirut befo
Damascus
in April 2017 was still being shelled from Ghouta (the civilian death
toll being now 11,000 deaths) and the district of Bab Touma where we
were staying had been targeted, as both Vanessa and Eva have
reported. So it was with a strange kind of joy that we drove through
the Old City gate, guarded by Syrian Army soldiers, to arrive at our
hotel. It was exhilarating knowing I was finally here! And the next
morning, when the sound of an explosion in the near distance woke me up,
there was a surreal sense that I had passed through into a parallel
reality. But this was life for the people of Damascus: the waiters and
waitresses glided back and forth throughout breakfast as the booms
continued and in the streets people were going about their business much
as you see here in this video I shot last year as we walked back to our hotel through Bab Touma.

That
well-worn phrase ‘an indomitable spirit’ became infused with deeper
meaning as I walked the streets of Damascus, Aleppo and Homs in 2017.
The affect upon me of our visit to East Aleppo talking to residents
who’d had children murdered by the terrorists is beyond my powers of
description to fully convey, but it left a mark on my soul that will
never be erased. In Homs, too, we met those who had suffered this most
unimaginable of horrors, igniting a special kind of anguish within me
fueled by the fact that the Syrian people are suffering at the hands of
my own government which meant an involuntary apology hovered on my lips
during my encounters. However, we were met everywhere with a moving
understanding, being told more than once that ‘people are not their
governments’, a sentiment I wrote about last
year from Damascus where we happened to be when the UK, US and France
bombed in ‘retaliation’ for the ‘Assad chemical attack’ in Douma, which
was, of course, another despicable propaganda exercise.
We also returned to
Aleppo last year, a city that has found a very special place in my
heart, and to see it rising again with bustling cafes and building work
everywhere I felt uplifted by the sheer resilience and bravery of a
people who have resisted an imperial onslaught that has ravaged and
devoured so many other nations.
The
Syrian people have given up their sons, daughters, fathers, mothers,
brothers and sisters to be martyred in a battle for all our survival;
how tragic then that news consumers in the West do not know what a debt
they owe. George Orwell couldn’t have written anything more sinister and
Goebbels himself could not have devised a more nefarious propaganda
strategy than the one to which Syria has been subjected. I have seen
time and again in my everyday life how those who are happy to be spoon
fed their news by corporate sources react on command to the ‘trusted’
information they absorb. But these willfully ignorant citizens in
Western countries carry a responsibility for the carnage in Syria and
they must learn – they will learn in the end – that there was no fence
to sit on when crimes of this magnitude were being committed by their
governments. I once read that western populations are the most ignorant
and apathetic in the world and I have to agree.
How
could corporate journalists get away with their lies if they were
consistently held to account by an awakened audience? This is the job of
every responsible citizen, not just a few independent activists like
myself who have taken up the pen in order to expose the rotten nexus
that is setting the world aflame for profit and power. It has to stop.
And Syria has been the field upon which the endgame has played out,
testing every one of us to stand up and declare our allegiances. Thoreau
wrote in 1849 that slavery called upon every person to declare their
opposition to it and to act upon that moral stance even if it meant
imprisonment. He stated that the issue divides nations, communities,
families, and even the individual, separating ‘the diabolical in him
from the divine.’ And so it is with Syria.
This
conflict has tested even seasoned media activists and found them
wanting: Media Lens have refused to support Vanessa Beeley, a journalist
embodying everything they have pleaded for in their books and online
output for almost twenty years. They could not bear the heat of the fire
that Vanessa lives with every day for even a moment, and so they have
helped to suppress the voices of Syrians, ironically aiding the very
forces they have railed against for so long. They folded when it truly
mattered, unlike their ally John Pilger who publicly and unequivocally
declared his support for Vanessa from the start without hesitation.
When the truth is at stake our actions tell us who we really are.
And
for the independent journalist that means knowingly devoting yourself
to a path that will never bring the material rewards or accolades of a
corporate career.
But
what price integrity? What price truth? We fund ourselves with
part-time jobs or much appreciated donations and we have, in reality,
something a corporate hack will never know – freedom.
And
no amount of money in the world can buy that. I have crowdfunded my
upcoming trip to Syria and I’m incredibly grateful to everyone who
helped me reach my target so that I can now go. Support for journalism
that counters the mainstream’s lies is never more vital than in this
historical moment. The voices of the Syrian people must be brought out
for the world to hear. There are just a few days left before my funder
closes and every penny beyond my target will be used to that end. Thank
you.