Journalists are waiting on the Jordan border to get news by donkey, as Syrian activists smuggle out video.
When I traveled to Syria more than 10 years ago, there was no Internet. The young people I met, who talked in whispers, had asked me to send them books from the outside world. Books on anything, art mainly. When I sent them postcards or letters, there were some things I couldn’t talk about, as the censors read everything, they said. Talking about Israel was a big no, no. So I had to avoid recounting my travels to the Middle East in full detail. Now, some of the people of Syria in the middle of a revolution, are cut off from the Internet that they’ve had access to over the last years. To get the word out to the media on what’s happening to them, as the government kills protestors and threatens soldiers with their lives, locals are relying on donkeys to transfer video files from Syria to Jordan.

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