Captured freelance journalist James Foley beheaded in Syria

Photo+of+American+journalist+James+Foley%2C+who+was+beheaded+in+a+video+released+on+Aug.+19+by+The+Islamic+State+of+Iraq+and+Syria+%28ISIS%29%2C+a+Sunni+jihadist+group%2C+after+being+held+hostage+since+Nov.+2012.%0A

Steven Senne

Photo of American journalist James Foley, who was beheaded in a video released on Aug. 19 by The Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), a Sunni jihadist group, after being held hostage since Nov. 2012.

American journalist James Foley was beheaded in a video released on Aug. 19 by The Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), a Sunni jihadist group, after being held hostage since Nov. 2012.

Foley, who was covering the Syrian uprising, was originally detained while traveling to the Turkish border with his translator. According to Syrian sources, he was captured by the Dawood Brigade, which pledged allegiance to ISIS last month. Foley’s captors allegedly demanded a ransom equivalent to approximately $132 million from his parents, as reported by The New York Times.

“This situation is a really good reminder that even though news is conveniently passed over the internet, radio, and television, there is a human voice behind every story we get,” Apoorva Rangan (12), Editor-in-Chief of The Winged Post, said. “That voice takes the courage of a single individual, and it makes journalism one of the most important duties anyone can have.”

President Obama deployed troops for a rescue operation in July, but the mission was ultimately unsuccessful after forces could not locate the hostages.

On Aug. 19, a video was uploaded depicting a masked member of ISIS executing Foley. In the video’s “Message to America,” ISIS demanded Obama to halt air strikes against the organization, threatening the death of another American journalist in ISIS’ custody, Steven Joel Sotloff. The U.S. National Security Council validated the video’s authenticity.

Journalists are often caught in the midst of social turbulence, as evidenced by the consistently high death rates of journalists worldwide. According to the U.S based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), 50 journalists have been killed on assignment this year, and an estimated 20 journalists are currently missing in Syria.

American freelance journalist, Peter Theo Curtis, was released last Sunday after he was held captive in Syria by Islamic rebels for nearly two years.

He was captured in Oct. 2012 by Jabhat al-Nusra, a rebel group linked to al Qaeda, and released to United Nation peacekeepers in the Israeli controlled Golan heights.

As of Tuesday night, Curtis has returned to the U.S.

Curtis covers stories in the Middle East for several publications, including the New Republic, The Huffington Post, and The London Review of Books.

 

This article was originally published in the pages of The Winged Post on August 29, 2014.