Behind the pixels – the human cost of the Islamic State’s social media war

Warning: this post contains graphic images.

You’ve seen the picture by now. An Australian boy, no older than seven, holding up the severed head of a Syrian soldier – the latest victim of the Islamic State’s brutal war of conquest in Iraq and the Levant. Below the picture, the proud words of his father, convicted terrorist and former Sydney resident Khaled Sharrouf: “That’s my boy!”

You’ve seen the picture, and that in itself raises questions about the lengths the media is prepared to go to show the horrors of war. Inevitably, a voice is raised in protest: how far is too far?

This fresh controversy comes just days after News Corp faced similar criticism for showing un-pixellated images of Malaysian flight MH-17 victims lying naked and torn in a field in Ukraine. But these new pictures weren’t taken by journalists – they were taken by an Aussie dad, proud of the man his son was turning into.

This adds a whole new dimension to the moral debate surrounding just how far we go in printing images of graphic violence; one of complicity. Certainly, social media has played a massive role in the Islamic State’s campaign to recruit and radicalise potential jihadists – by publishing their propaganda in all its violence and brutality, aren’t we just giving the would-be terrorist state a wider audience?

Whatever misgivings they might have had, News Corp publications such as The Daily Telegraph and The Australian (as well as the ABC’s online siteelected to publish the photograph in graphic detail, mildly pixellating the face of the dead Syrian soldier and stamping a black bar over the eyes of the seven-year old boy straining to lift the severed head on his own.

Source: The Australian
Source: The Australian

What expression does he have, under that black bar? We might like to imagine the child’s eyes screwed up in pain and disgust at what his father is making him do, terrified to do anything but obey the man who raised him. More likely there’s a look we recognise from our own childhoods, that eager-to-please concentration of a young boy desperate not to disappoint the grown-ups. There might even be no expression – just the bored, far-away look of a child sick of standing still for the camera. He might even be smiling.

Without forcing ourselves to see this photo, the idea of children as young as four being trained to rape and torture and kill in the name of God might remain just that – an idea, too awful even to contemplate. The power of photographs lies in their ability to shock an increasingly desensitised public out of apathy. It may sicken us to watch a monk burning himself alive or a child lying broken in the wreckage of a passenger jet, but what else should we be feeling when confronted by acts of violence and degradation?

We need to feel shocked. We need to feel outraged. We need to look at that child, so far from home, and ask ourselves if he’s smiling.

 

 

3 responses to “Behind the pixels – the human cost of the Islamic State’s social media war”

  1. I have been asking myself exactly those questions in the last couple of weeks. How far do we go or have to go in order to be heard/read/ shock our viewers? Media Watch was great at dissecting some of those issues relating to the MH17 tragedy. I am baffled by how far media organisations are willing to go in order to gain readership. Remember learning about the guidelines for more effective coverage by the Dart Centre? All rules have been broken in the last few weeks. Great topic, well written. Well done!

  2. I don’t want to see the severed head, but I do want to know who it belonged to, what his life was like, and why he was killed in the way that he was – I think that’s the real story. Without that kind of detail, I think the republication of these images amounts to doing the IS’s publicity for them.

    1. I completely agree. Publishing these kinds of images without looking at the humanity in them defeats the purpose for printing them in the first place (and basically amounts to disaster voyeurism). That said, I think sometimes it’s necessary to convey the human cost of tragedies like this not just through words but with images – shocking though they may be. If you can combine confronting images with powerful, compassionate investigative journalism, that’s probably one of the strongest ways to convey the grim reality of what you’re reporting on.

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