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This biographical article needs additional citations for verification. Please help this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced or poorly sourced material about living persons must be removed immediately, especially if potentially libelous or harmful. This article has been tagged since October 2007. |
| Lara Logan | |
|---|---|
| Born | March 29 1971 Durban, South Africa |
| Known for | CBS News |
| Occupation | News Reporter |
Lara Logan (born March 29, 1971) is a television and radio journalist and war correspondent. She is currently the Chief Foreign Correspondent for CBS News, filing reports for the CBS Evening News, 60 Minutes and the CBS Radio Network.
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Life
Logan was born in Durban, South Africa. She attended high school at Durban Girls' College, and then attended the University of Natal in Durban, graduating in 1992. She is married to Jason Siemon, who was, until recently, a professional basketball player in the United Kingdom for the now-defunct Brighton Bears.
Career
Logan has described how she begged a clerk at the Russian Embassy in London to give her an expedited visa days after the September 11, 2001 attacks. She then entered Afghanistan through southern Russia. In November 2001, Logan, then working as a correspondent for the British morning program, GMTV, managed to infiltrate the upper ranks of the Northern Alliance in Afghanistan, where she gained exclusive interviews at Bagram Air Base with General Babajan, a commander. Logan spent much of the next four years reporting from the field in Afghanistan, traveling often as an embedded reporter with American forces. Named chief foreign correspondent of CBS News in February 2006, Logan was embedded with a U.S. military unit in Ramadi, Iraq on March 10, 2006, when a nearby Marine was shot by a sniper.
Haifa Street Battle Controversy
In late January 2007 Logan filed a report about fighting along Haifa Street.[1] When CBS News refused to run the report on the nightly news because the footage was "a bit strong"[2] (although the network did run the report on their internet site), Logan tried to win public support to reverse this decision. Logan stated that "I would be very grateful if any of you have a chance to watch this story and pass the link on to as many people you know as possible. It should be seen. And people should know about this."[3] After making this public appeal, some conservative bloggers and columnists made the claim that portions of Logan's video report contains footage that is identical to footage released by al Qaeda. While this claim remains unsubstantiated (the ultimate source of the video has not been revealed by CBS News, or Logan, for reasons stated below), these individuals have nonetheless questioned Logan's objectivity based on that premise.[4] CBS News Vice President Paul Friedman said that the video was not from Al-Qaeda, although he declined to name the source. "Whenever we can identify the source of information or video, we want to do that," he added. "There are some rare cases when we have to protect the source. In this case, we needed to do so, because it’s literally a matter of life and death."[5] CBS News spokeswoman Sandra Genelius added that "The fact that same video shows up in more than one place is something that happens every day. We occasionally use video from an Al-Qaeda Web site and we identify it. In this case, we didn't get it from Al-Qaeda, so we didn't identify it as such."[6] Logan went on to use some of the Haifa Street material in a 60 Minutes report about life in Baghdad under the surge.
References and Notes
- ^ "Battle for Haifa Street", by Lara Logan, CBS News, accessed Feb 2, 2007.
- ^ "Helping Lara Logan" by Rory O'Connor and David Olson, Mediachannel.org, Jan. 26, 2007, accessed Feb. 1, 2007
- ^ "Lara Logan Appeals as CBS Rejects Her Iraq Report: Katie Couric's Newscast Nixes Story Because Images 'a Bit Strong'" on Irag Slogger blog, Jan. 30, 2007, accessed Feb. 1, 2007;"Helping Lara Logan" by Rory O'Connor and David Olson, Mediachannel.org, Jan. 26, 2007, accessed Feb. 1, 2007; "CBS Correspondent Makes Plea for Airtime" by David Bauder, Casper Star Tribune, February 01, 2007
- ^ "A CBS story 'too important to ignore'" by Michelle Malkin, Jewish World Review, Jan. 21, 2007, accessed Feb. 1, 2007; Vent with Michelle Malkin video published on January 31, 2007; "Interesting Controversy Surrounding CBS’s Lara Logan" by New York Sun columnist Nibras Kazimi's non-Sun affiliated Talisman Gate blog, January 26, 2007, accessed Feb. 1, 2007;"CBS's Lara Logan Controversy: Round Two Was the Video CBS "Obtained" from Al Qaeda?" on Irag Slogger blog, Jan. 30, 2007, accessed Feb. 1, 2007.
- ^ "Questions Surround Haifa Street Video" CBS News Public Eye blog January 30, 2007, accessed Feb. 1, 2007.
- ^ "Questions Surround Haifa Street Video" CBS News Public Eye blog January 30, 2007, accessed Feb. 1, 2007.
External links
- CBS News profile
- Lara Logan at the Internet Movie Database
- Logan appears on CNN's Reliable Sources with host Howard Kurtz- Responds to question, "Are Media Turning Against War in Iraq?" (transcript)
- Logan responds in print to criticism of media in Iraq
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| Current | Anderson Cooper • Katie Couric • Steve Kroft • Lara Logan • Scott Pelley • Morley Safer • Bob Simon • Lesley Stahl • Mike Wallace |
| Former | Christiane Amanpour • Ed Bradley • Dan Rather • Harry Reasoner • Diane Sawyer • Meredith Vieira |


