Michael spoke to journalism students at Queensland
University of Technology about his experiences in
Iraq. This is a news clip they produced about the
event:
TRANSCRIPT
Students at Q-U-T were treated to a guest lecture
from CNN’s Michael Ware today, a welcome home for the
Brisbanite who nearly didn’t make it.
Michael Ware, CNN Correspondent: “I was dragged from
my car by a chap who had a live grenade. He had the
pin in one hand and held it in the other and he held
it to my head.”
Michael’s captors planned to film his execution with
his own camera. But he was saved by a nationalist
insurgent and friend who convinced them to let him
go.
Kidnapped three times, the lucky to be alive
41-year-old says his staff were also abducted and
tortured.
Michael Ware, CNN Correspondent: “They’ve saved my
life several times and risked theirs countless times
and never once did any of them take a backwards
step.”
At least 40 journalists have been killed in Iraq
since the war began in 2003, 13 of those were killed
by US troops.
For the journalists who’d come home, they often don’t
return the way they once were.
Michael is on leave from CNN to finish the book but
to do that he has to revisit the horrors he’s locked
away in his mind.
Michael Ware, CNN Correspondent: “Laughing while a
man gurgles for life is common place. On the front
line you become de-sensitised.”
Since returning home, Michael has helped families he
met in Afghanistan move to Australia, England and the
United States.
The book, titled, “Between Me and the Dead”, will be
published early next year.
Ashlea Tighe, QUT News
This is a win-win-win for all concerned -- Michael, CNN, and the audience.April 30, 2010, 7:03 PM
CNN Is ‘Standing With’ Stressed-Out War Correspondent
By BRIAN STELTER
Michael Ware has spent so much of the past nine years reporting from war zones for Time magazine and CNN that it’s almost like he’s a citizen of Iraq.
That experience, he says, has left him with post-traumatic stress disorder. In an interview on Thursday, he said that CNN wanted him back in the field before he felt he was ready and, as a result, he was under the impression that he had been released from his contract. “I required further time off than I think CNN was able to give,” he said.
But there may have been a misunderstanding. On Friday CNN said that Mr. Ware is still employed by the network, disputing an unsourced report on a blog that he was no longer working for the network and that the disorder was a reason.
“We will continue to support him during this time,” the cable news network said in a statement. The network said it was “rightly regarded as an industry leader” in dealing with post-traumatic stress disorder, and that it offers support services to past and present employees.
Mr. Ware’s agent, Richard Leibner, said, “They are clearly standing with him now.”
In a telephone interview from Brisbane, Australia, where he currently lives, Mr. Ware said he first met with a company psychologist two years ago to talk about post-traumatic stress. But he continued to report from conflict zones. At news outlets like CNN, deployment to dangerous locations is always voluntary.
In an interview, Mr. Ware talked openly about how hard it can be to return from war to home, calling the homecoming “beyond harsh.”
“It’s a struggle to learn how to fit back in,” he said, “and yet, that’s precisely what’s expected of you — to fit back in.”
He said he started a three-month book leave in February. Before long his bosses were itching to get him back in the field. “They wanted me back straight away,” he said. He submitted a request for further unpaid leave, apparently without citing P.T.S.D. as a reason. When that request was denied, Mr. Ware said he believed he had been effectively unemployed. But his agent said the CNN bosses were not fully aware of his current condition.
CNN said in the statement Friday, “We hope that when he is ready and able he will be back doing what he does best.”
Mr. Ware has talked publicly about his post-traumatic stress (though not on CNN’s airwaves) and he said he would continue to do so. And he certainly doesn’t rule out a return to conflict in the future.
“I still miss war,” he said.
I
learned today that Michael has parted ways with CNN.
In addition to having taken a break to work on his
book, it is no secret that he has been grappling with
PTSD, brought on from the hellish years he worked in
Baghdad. Unfortunately, when he needed more time off
in order to deal with things, his request was denied.
So he will not be returning.
While it is a huge loss for us (and for CNN) I am
extremely relieved that he chose to take care of his
own needs first. And while I sincerely hope that he
will return to US television someday on another
network, it is far more important that he gets the
care he needs.
I will, of course, continue to keep track of whatever
work he does -- his book or other writings, or if he
makes appearances here or in Australia.
When I started this site, he was working for Time
magazine. I was delighted when he transitioned to
CNN, knowing that it meant we would get more of his
remarkable work. And now there will be a new chapter
in his career to look forward to ... but only after
this brief intermission.
If you care to express your opinion about this, I
welcome you to come over to the blog to do so, and also
hope you will let CNN know what you're thinking.
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