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TIME: Almanac 1995
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1994-03-25
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<text id=91TT0653>
<title>
Mar. 25, 1991: From The Publisher
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
Mar. 25, 1991 Boris Yeltsin:Russia's Maverick
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 14
</hdr><body>
<p> Christopher Morris and Anthony Suau knew they were in
trouble when the Republican Guards stopped them at a shattered
bridge on the outskirts of Basra. The two photographers, who
were working for TIME, were headed for the Iraqi city to cover
the fighting between government troops and insurgents in the
wake of the gulf war. But the guardsmen seized Morris and Suau
and more than 25 other journalists on March 3, a Sunday, and
ransacked their cars. "It was as if we had walked into a den
of 40 thieves," said Suau, 34. "Everything disappeared very
quickly."
</p>
<p> For the next six days, the group's captors shuttled the
journalists from one site to another while deciding what to do
with them, and the world wondered where they were. The first
stop was Basra University, which was surrounded by tanks and
artillery and swarming with Iraqi troops. Soldiers herded all
the hostages into a small room furnished with two beds and half
a dozen broken television sets. The weary journalists spent the
night without food, water or much sleep, as rifle fire barked
outside their windows and artillery rockets screamed overhead.
</p>
<p> Fearing that the location was too dangerous, the Iraqis
moved the hostages to a red brick barracks outside Basra, where
they were confined to a bare, partly underground room. "I
didn't think they would kill us," said Morris, 32. "But I
worried that they would hold us for two weeks or a month. My
big concern was food and sanitary conditions." Their daily diet
was a piece of chicken and a slice of stale bread. That was
more than their guards got. "They said we were guests," Morris
added. "They didn't like the word prisoners."
</p>
<p> By Thursday the Iraqis were ready to hand over the hostages
to the Red Cross in Baghdad. But fierce civil warfare made all
roads to the capital unsafe. So helicopters flew the group from
Basra to Baghdad, dodging flares and tracer fire along the
three-hour flight. In Baghdad, the Red Cross treated the
famished journalists to what Suau called "our first really good
meal in six days" before busing them to Jordan, where they were
released. "The ironic thing," Morris recalls, "is that we went
from Dhahran to Kuwait City to Basra to Baghdad to Amman, and
not one roll of film to show for it." We regret that too, but
we've settled happily for having the pair safely out of Iraq.
</p>
<p>-- Robert L. Miller
</p>
</body></article>
</text>