• Subscribe to our newsletter
The Media Online
  • Home
  • MOST Awards
  • News
    • Awards
    • Media Mecca
  • Print
    • Newspapers
    • Magazines
    • Publishing
  • Broadcasting
    • TV
    • Radio
    • Cinema
    • Video
  • Digital
    • Mobile
    • Online
  • Agencies
    • Advertising
    • Media agency
    • Public Relations
  • OOH
    • Events
  • Research & Education
    • Research
    • Media Education
      • Media Mentor
  • Press Office
    • Press Office
    • TMO.Live Blog
    • Events
    • Jobs
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • MOST Awards
  • News
    • Awards
    • Media Mecca
  • Print
    • Newspapers
    • Magazines
    • Publishing
  • Broadcasting
    • TV
    • Radio
    • Cinema
    • Video
  • Digital
    • Mobile
    • Online
  • Agencies
    • Advertising
    • Media agency
    • Public Relations
  • OOH
    • Events
  • Research & Education
    • Research
    • Media Education
      • Media Mentor
  • Press Office
    • Press Office
    • TMO.Live Blog
    • Events
    • Jobs
No Result
View All Result
The Media Online
No Result
View All Result
Home News

When news images lie

by Julian Rademeyer
October 8, 2014
in News
0 0
0
When news images lie
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

When news websites appropriate news photographs as catch-all illustrations they lie to their readers and show contempt for news photographers, says Africa Check editor, Julian Rademeyer.

The image on the front page of the TimesLive news website was powerful. A car shrouded in black smoke burned furiously, flames licking out of smashed windows. The headline accompanying the photograph and an article about student protests in South Africa read: ‘18 cars set alight at Tshwane University of Technology‘.

But there was something troubling about the photograph. The car looked a little too battered, even by the standards of many South African students. The caption offered little by way of explanation. “A car burns,” it stated, along with the photographer’s name, Feisal Omar.

TimesLive used the image again a few days later alongside a letter written by a South African education department spokesman decrying the Tshwane University protests. This time the caption casually referred to it as a “file photograph”.

A Google search using the keywords ‘Feisal Omar car burn, turned up dozens of images of burning cars, gunmen, explosions and people desperately running for cover. None of them had been taken in South Africa.

The price of news

A screen grab of the TimesLive article and the photograph taken by Feisal Omar in Somalia

Finally I found the original. It had nothing to do with students or demonstrations in South Africa. It was taken on 10 June 2011 outside the Hotel Madina in the Somali capital, Mogadishu, during violent protests in which two teenagers had been killed.

Omar, I discovered, was born in Somalia and had been working for the Reuters news agency since 2007. He is one of the brave handful of photographers and journalists still documenting the suicide bombings, gunbattles and bloodshed that are an all too terrible daily reality there.

Omar’s work has nearly cost him his life several times over. Once, while covering an advance by government forces against Al Shabaab militants, the car in front of him was ambushed. Five people including an army commander were killed. Omar was caught in the crossfire but survived. Despite this, he continues to take extraordinary risks to tell a largely untold story.

In South Africa, in the hands of an online editor hurriedly looking for an illustration to go with an article about burning cars, none of that mattered. Nor, it would seem, did the website’s readers.

In the context in which it was used, the image was a lie. Most people who glanced at the story probably thought it was a car burning at the Tshwane University of Technology. There was nothing to tell them otherwise.

Not an isolated incident

A screenshot of the News24 article. The photograph was taken in the US, not South Africa.

But the problem is far larger than a single story or a single website. All too often South Africa’s leading news websites use news images stripped of context as illustrations.

Take the story of a police investigation in Pongola in South Africa’s KwaZulu-Natal province, which News24 ran earlier this year. A pastor had been arrested after the dismembered corpse of a four-year-old boy was discovered in his church. ‘More bones found on Pongola pastor’s property‘ read the headline. Alongside it was a photograph of a woman peering through a camera viewfinder at a wooden stump and a crime scene tag. There was no caption – just the photographer’s name, Mitch Stacy, and his agency, AP.

Like the burning car photo it had nothing remotely to do with the story or South Africa. In fact the photo had been taken in November 2010 at a veterinary forensics seminar in Florida in the United States and showed Diane Robinson of the American Humane Association marking and photographing details of a staged wildlife crime scene.

A betrayal of trust

Just last week, TimesLive ran an article about a Durban man who had saved a passer-by from robbers and then collapsed and died. It was his “last act of heroism”, the website wrote. The story was accompanied by a dramatic photograph of an ambulance in heavy dust or fog, surrounded by a cluster of shadowy figures. “A hospital ambulance. File photo,” read the caption. The photographer was named as Danish Siddiqui.

The image, which has been used to illustrate other TimesLive articles, including a comment piece about ambulance drivers in South Africa, was actually taken in India’s capital, New Delhi, in December 2012.

It captured the moment an ambulance arrived at a crematorium in the city. Inside it was the corpse of a 23-year-old medical student who had died after being viciously gang-raped. Ironically, before appropriating the image as a one-size-fits-all illustration, TimesLive had actually used it in its proper context.

Distorting news images in this way demonstrates contempt for readers, betrays their trust and insults the efforts of photographers like Omar who try to tell incredibly difficult stories as accurately and honestly as they can. It is not news. It is fabrication.

© Copyright Africa Check 2014

Additional reading

Guide: How to spot fakes and hoaxes online

Report: Boko Haram massacre image a fake

Africa Check is an independent, non-partisan organisation which assesses claims made in the public arena using journalistic skills and evidence drawn from the latest online tools, readers, public sources and experts, sorting fact from fiction and publishing the results. 

 

Tags: Africa CheckFeisal OmarJulian Rademeyernews photographyTImesLIVE

Julian Rademeyer

Julian Rademeyer is editor of Africa Check, an independent, non-partisan organisation which assesses claims made in the public arena using journalistic skills and evidence drawn from the latest online tools, readers, public sources and experts, sorting fact from fiction and publishing the results. Rademeyer is an award-winning investigative journalist who, for nearly 20 years, has written and worked for City Press, Beeld, Witness, Sunday Times, Pretoria News, Herald, Reuters, Sydney Morning Herald and the Australian Associated Press (AAP). Until recently he was chief reporter for Media24 Investigations. He has reported from a number of countries, including Somalia, Equatorial Guinea, Niger, Mozambique, Namibia, Belarus, India, Egypt and the Lebanon, where he covered the 2006 ‘Summer War’. He has won a number of awards, notably the 2005 Vodacom Journalist of the Year award for print news and the 2009 Mondi Shanduka Newspaper Award for hard news. He has twice been a finalist for the Taco Kuiper Award, South Africa’s leading investigative journalism prize. His work has been published in two books: Troublemakers: The Best of South Africa’s Investigative Journalism and the BY Bedkassieboek, a compilation of the best of Afrikaans newspaper writing. - Struik

Follow Us

  • twitter
  • threads
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Kelders van Geheime: The characters are here

Kelders van Geheime: The characters are here

March 22, 2024
Dissecting the LSM 7-10 market

Dissecting the LSM 7-10 market

May 17, 2023
Keri Miller sets the record straight after being axed from ECR

Keri Miller sets the record straight after being axed from ECR

April 23, 2023
Getting to know the ES SEMs 8-10 (Part 1)

Getting to know the ES SEMs 8-10 (Part 1)

February 22, 2018
Sowetan proves that sex still sells

Sowetan proves that sex still sells

105
It’s black. It’s beautiful. It’s ours.

Exclusive: Haffajee draws a line in the sand over racism

98
The Property Magazine and Media Nova go supernova

The Property Magazine and Media Nova go supernova

44
Warrant of arrest authorised for Media Nova’s Vaughan

Warrant of arrest authorised for Media Nova’s Vaughan

41
AI in sponsorship: Beyond the buzzword

AI in sponsorship: Beyond the buzzword

May 9, 2025
Upping the ante: Tracking the year-on-year growth of gambling in SA

Upping the ante: Tracking the year-on-year growth of gambling in SA

May 9, 2025
Seven Days on Social Media: Tonya’s in hospital, the nation’s in chaos and SA doesn’t care about Joshlin

Seven Days on Social Media: Tonya’s in hospital, the nation’s in chaos and SA doesn’t care about Joshlin

May 9, 2025
Social media platforms are replacing Google

Social media platforms are replacing Google

May 8, 2025

Recent News

AI in sponsorship: Beyond the buzzword

AI in sponsorship: Beyond the buzzword

May 9, 2025
Upping the ante: Tracking the year-on-year growth of gambling in SA

Upping the ante: Tracking the year-on-year growth of gambling in SA

May 9, 2025
Seven Days on Social Media: Tonya’s in hospital, the nation’s in chaos and SA doesn’t care about Joshlin

Seven Days on Social Media: Tonya’s in hospital, the nation’s in chaos and SA doesn’t care about Joshlin

May 9, 2025
Social media platforms are replacing Google

Social media platforms are replacing Google

May 8, 2025

ABOUT US

The Media Online is the definitive online point of reference for South Africa’s media industry offering relevant, focused and topical news on the media sector. We deliver up-to-date industry insights, guest columns, case studies, content from local and global contributors, news, views and interviews on a daily basis as well as providing an online home for The Media magazine’s content, which is posted on a monthly basis.

Follow Us

  • twitter
  • threads

ARENA HOLDING

Editor: Glenda Nevill
glenda.nevill@cybersmart.co.za
Sales and Advertising:
Tarin-Lee Watts
wattst@arena.africa
Download our rate card

OUR NETWORK

TimesLIVE
Sunday Times
SowetanLIVE
BusinessLIVE
Business Day
Financial Mail
HeraldLIVE
DispatchLIVE
Wanted Online
SA Home Owner
Business Media MAGS
Arena Events

NEWSLETTER SUBSCRIPTION

 
Subscribe
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

Copyright © 2015 - 2023 The Media Online. All rights reserved. Part of Arena Holdings (Pty) Ltd

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • MOST Awards
  • News
    • Awards
    • Media Mecca
  • Print
    • Newspapers
    • Magazines
    • Publishing
  • Broadcasting
    • TV
    • Radio
    • Cinema
    • Video
  • Digital
    • Mobile
    • Online
  • Agencies
    • Advertising
    • Media agency
    • Public Relations
  • OOH
    • Events
  • Research & Education
    • Research
    • Media Education
      • Media Mentor
  • Press Office
    • Press Office
    • TMO.Live Blog
    • Events
    • Jobs

Copyright © 2015 - 2023 The Media Online. All rights reserved. Part of Arena Holdings (Pty) Ltd

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?