Cited as Symbol of Abu Ghraib, Man Admits He Is Not in Photo

BATMAN

Member
Dec 6, 2005
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Ken-Tenn USA
In the summer of 2004, a group of former detainees of Abu Ghraib prison filed a lawsuit claiming that they had been the victims of the abuse captured in photographs that incited outrage around the world.

One, Ali Shalal Qaissi, soon emerged as their chief representative, appearing in publications and on television in several countries to detail his suffering. His prominence made sense, because he claimed to be the man in the photograph that had become the international icon of the Abu Ghraib scandal: standing on a cardboard box, hooded, with wires attached to his outstretched arms. He had even emblazoned the silhouette of that image on business cards.

The trouble was, the man in the photograph was not Mr. Qaissi.
FULL ARTICLE
Makes you wonder what else could have been "misrepresented."
 
BATMAN said:
Sorry Miss Mod, I missed it - I'll crack the ruler on my knuckles. ;)
Well that makes the teacher part of me envious! Those would have been the days! :laugh: Seriously, thought you would be interested in the Moody's thing.
 

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