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zaterdag, april 05, 2003

War reporters and photographers are increasingly armed with satellite telephones and cellphones that give coverage an immediacy previously unimaginable, but advances in technology do not lessen the grimness of prosaic matters, like finding drinkable water or a place to go to the bathroom or electricity to charge the phones.

"The hardest part of combat photography is how you're going to survive — getting from Point A to Point B, where you're going to sleep, what you're going to eat and drink once you're there," said Christopher Morris, a photographer who works under contract to Time magazine. "Forget the war part of it — it's just the day-to-day living."

Bron: The New York Times.





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