Kidnapped Journalist Talks Libya Feb. 9
James Foley will recount his ordeal as reporter and captive during the Libyan revolution.
Celebrated journalist James Foley will speak at 色情视频 Thursday, Feb. 9, as part of the 鈥 lecture series, 鈥淯nderstanding the Arab Spring.鈥
Foley is an American journalist who was held captive in Libya for more than a month during the spring of 2011 after being captured in an ambush by loyalist forces 鈥 an attack which took his colleague鈥檚 life. After his release last May, he returned to Libya to cover the final days of the Muammar Gadhafi regime and the battle for Sirte.
The lecture, which is free and open to the public, will begin at 7 p.m. in Hepner Hall, room 130.
鈥淛ames Foley's experience covering the revolution and the war in Libya gives him an insider's perspective on the role that the media played in the events that led to the fall of the Gadhafi regime,鈥 said , director of the Center of Islamic and Arabic Studies. 鈥淎s a practitioner of journalism in the midst of the Arab Spring, he adds a valuable perspective to the series.鈥
Social media and the Arab Spring
Foley will discuss his experiences in Libya as a journalist and captive, including a discussion on the role of media during the revolution.
Additionally, he will address how Libyans used social media to spark and fuel the popular revolt, along with the role and ethical issues of international journalists who reported in Libya.
A return to Libya
Foley and three other journalists were covering the Libyan Revolution 鈥 in this case, specifically a battle in the oil port of Brega 鈥 when they were attacked on the road outside of the town by Gadhafi loyalists. South African photographer Anton Hamerl was killed in the firefight and left behind in the desert after the remaining three were taken captive.
Foley plans on returning to Libya for the first anniversary of the revolution Feb. 17, where he will be involved in the investigation for the remains of his colleague.
Foley earned a graduate degree from the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University in 2007, and soon afterward went to Iraq as an embedded reporter inside the Indiana National Guard and the 101st Airborne.
He covered the war in Afghanistan for GlobalPost for six months in 2010. His video reports were featured on the 鈥淧BS NewsHour鈥 and 鈥淐BS Evening News,鈥 and his 鈥淥n Location: A Firefight in Kunar Province鈥 is a 2011 Webby Award nominee.
More about the lecture series
The 鈥淯nderstanding the Arab Spring鈥 lecture series will feature two additional speakers this semester, including:
- 鈥淭he Case of Egypt鈥 with Professor Paul Amar of University of California Santa Barbara; Thursday, February 23, 2012, 7 p.m., location to be determined.
- 鈥淗uman Rights Violations鈥 with Sarah Leah Whitson; Tuesday, March 6, 2012, time and location to be determined
For more information about the lecture series, visit the .