Copyright 1999
The Christian Science Monitor
September
13, 1999, Monday
Conned in Kosovo: a CBC reporter's
dilemma
Tom Regan, Special to The Christian Science Monitor
HALIFAX, NOVA SCOTIA
When Nancy Durham first discovered that she had been lied
to, her reaction was "the most incredible sinking
feeling."
Ms. Durham, a Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation (CBC) television reporter,
had returned to Kosovo in June of
this year, to do a follow-up piece on an 18-year-old girl
who had joined the Kosovo
Liberation Army after her young sister had been killed
by Serbs. The girl's story had
been part of a larger piece that aired on the CBC in
January, to much critical praise. Yet as Durham stood in
the doorway of the family's home in Skenderaj, the sister
who was supposed to have been killed
was standing there, alive and well.
Rather than trying to excuse or brush off the lie,
or have the CBC do a simple correction, Durham decided to
do a full story - not only about the girl who told it,
but what it said about how news is reported from a war
zone.
The result is a 16-minute report: "The Truth About
Rajmonda: A KLA Soldier Lies for
the Cause." It's being hailed by many media
observers in Canada as a
breakthrough piece that should serve as a model for other
news organizations.
Durham's involvement with Rajmonda Rreci began in
September 1998 while she was filming a piece on an
Albanian doctor. Rajmonda, a patient, told Durham on
camera that she was joining the KLA to avenge the death
of her six-year old sister. Durham (who works as a
one-woman reporting "team") returned in
December 1998 and tracked down Ms. Rreci. During that
interview, Rreci said that her sister was fortunate to
die for Kosovo, and that she
would do the same.
Then in June, almost as soon as NATO-led peacekeeping
troops went into the region, Durham went back. It was
during this trip she learned that Rreci had lied.
When confronted, she told Durham that she had actually
thought her sister was dead, but wasn't sure, and that
doctors in the hospital had encouraged her to tell the
story because other girls had lost sisters to the Serbs.
"My first thoughts were 'This is a disaster,' "
says Durham. "I had this passion for the people in
the story. I felt really depressed. If this happens to
me, I thought, and I go back again, and again, and again,
how many other journalists has this happened to?"
Durham returned to her home in Oxford, England, and
thought about what she wanted to do. And although some
media critics have said that the CBC pushed her to go
back to do the report, Durham says this is untrue. She
says she needed to go back, find Rajmonda Rreci again,
and this time tell the true story.
It turned out that most of what the teenager had said
wasn't true. She had actually been a member of the KLA
before she went to the hospital and had known all along
that her sister was alive. But Rreci continued to stress
that other Kosovar girls had lost their sisters, and why
shouldn't she do it for them? Ultimately, Rreci did admit
that what she said was just KLA propaganda.
For Steve Kimber, director of the school of journalism at
the University of King's College in Halifax, Nova Scotia,
what Durham and the CBC did was critical. "It's very
important to make journalism more transparent to the
public. Particularly with a story that deals with
'heartstrings' like this one. And if it's not true, to
give it just as much time as the story you had broadcast
earlier."
John Allemang, media critic for the Toronto Globe and
Mail, says that while he feels the CBC has
"overreacted," he's proud of the broadcaster
for airing Durham's report. "But the question is,
are they applying it across the board? There are lots of
other situations where we're aware that we're not being
told the complete truth. Is the CBC going to now start
going back to check on other stories? The truth is, that
it's hard for the media to check up on these
things."
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