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- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 4
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- Of all the continents for a foreign correspondent to cover,
- Africa, with its wars, hostile terrain and often impossible
- communications, is the most difficult. TIME Nairobi bureau
- chief Marguerite Michaels sums it up: "Getting the story in
- Africa is only one-half of the job of a journalist. Getting to
- the story, more often than not, is the real challenge."
- Michaels, one of four Africa-based TIME correspondents to
- contribute to this week's cover story, has met that challenge
- in many ways. Perhaps the most dramatic was her visit last year
- to Eritrea, which had just won a 30-year war of independence
- from Ethiopia and had promptly shut down the airport and all
- other means of communication with the outside world. Michaels
- flew to neighboring Djibouti, chartered an Arab dhow to the Red
- Sea port of Mesewa and hitched a ride for the final 71 miles to
- the Eritrean capital, Asmara.
-
- TIME Cairo correspondent Bill Dowell faced comparable
- difficulties when he had to travel to Liberia to co-report our
- cover story. With Monrovia's main airport still under rebel
- control following the bloody civil war that ousted President
- Samuel Doe, Dowell flew in on a tiny Cessna that landed on a
- makeshift airstrip. Nearby lay the charred remains of a
- Russian-built transport plane that had failed to make such a
- landing a few days earlier. Dowell also visited Francophone
- Ivory Coast, Senegal and Mali. Michaels, meanwhile, fanned out
- as far afield as Zambia, Zaire, Burkina Fasso, Nigeria, Benin
- and Togo.
-
- Further coverage was provided by Cape Town correspondent
- Peter Hawthorne and Johannesburg bureau chief Scott MacLeod. In
- the United States, meanwhile, former TIME senior editor Jack
- White compiled a black American's view of Africa and the impact
- of the evolving African-American lobby.
-
- The main story was written by New York City-based senior
- writer Lance Morrow, for whom Africa has been a longtime
- passion. Morrow has made two trips there: in 1986, to write a
- cover story on African animals, and in 1988, to explore on foot
- the Mathews Range of northern Kenya. Despite Africa's immense
- problems, Morrow and our correspondents hold deep, largely
- positive feelings toward it -- not as a lost continent but as
- one yet to be found. "If I could arrange it, I think I would
- live there," says Morrow. He has even pinpointed the spot:
- "Probably around the Great Rift Valley, northwest of Mount Kenya
- on the Laikipia plateau." He could do worse.
-
- Elizabeth P. Valk
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