Jordan Rodriguez, journalist team of correspondents sent by the multi-channel Telesur on Libya, in an exclusive interview with AVN after his arrival in Venezuela, after spending a month giving coverage to the conflict in the African country. Photo: Jack Bocaranda, AVN
Jordan Rodriguez, Telesur journalist, who spent 38 days as special envoy to Tripoli during the internal conflict, outlined his North African experience.
" We have been witness to what is fourth generation warfare materialized, it is not a myth or a story the way what happened in Libya," he said. During his
the program "Open Agenda" transmitting "VTV", the reporter explained that Telesur news crew was the first to arrive in Tripoli.
said that in the days of chaos in Libya, there was speculation as to the information being communicated. " is not the same as saying that a government is bombing and killing people to say that there is an armed group and that the army is fighting that group."
blamed the international media of conflict in that country, aggravated by the foreign military intervention adopted by the Organization United Nations (UN).
"People in the street feels, and indeed should still feel that television cameras are responsible for what is happening now in Libya," said Rodriguez, on Tuesday, told Telesur.
As a journalist, " could be the target of opposition and radical groups , and that any work was very complicated," he added.
Jordan Rodriguez, Telesur journalist, who spent 38 days as special envoy to Tripoli during the internal conflict, outlined his North African experience. Photo: VTV
(With information from News 24, Venezuela)
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