Iceland review - 2015, Page 42

Iceland review - 2015, Page 42
40 ICELAND REVIEW dangerous situations, Jón says he tries to understand all individuals on a human level, including those who have threatened to take his life. “These are often guys who have not slept for a long time. They can be very unpredictable but I’ve spent my whole life looking for the bad guys and I still haven’t found them. At the end of the day, everyone just wants a better life,” Jón says philosophically. He also tries not to let negative experiences interfere with his love of a country. “I was taken hostage in Yemen but Yemen is [still] one of my favorite places and some of these other places, like the Central African Republic, can be great too—in between the wars at least, other times they’re terrible.” WITNESSING HISTORY Although he’s been covering disasters and conflicts for almost four decades—he is even known by some of his foreign col- leagues as the ‘Master of Disaster,’—Jón is adamant that he doesn’t seek them out. “I’m never looking for war. This is just part of what is happening in the world, so I cover it. Others might say ‘no’ to such assignments but to me it’s just work. And when you’ve gone on one and come back with the experience and no new holes in your body, they tend to call you again. I feel a bit like a sorcerer’s apprentice. I started something I was unable to stop,” he says of the demand for his services. Witnessing history unfold first-hand keeps him interested in the job. “It’s fas- cinating to experience world history at its source. Can you imagine, one day Libya is closed to all media and the next I’m staring at Gaddafi’s dead body? In war, at least in the beginning, the anarchy gives you access you never have elsewhere, you can sit in the president’s office and consult his files, talk to prisoners in their cells, and the wounded on the operating table.” In December last year The Economist reported that an Icelandic citizen was working as a filmmaker for the terrorist organization IS in Syria, producing profes- sional videos used to attract new recruits and scare Western viewers. With Jón being quite possibly the only Icelandic filmmaker to have worked in Syria during the conflict, could it have been a misunderstanding involving him? “I heard about that [news] but I don’t know who it is,” he responds. “It’s very flattering [that people might think it’s me] because the footage is good,” he adds lightheartedly, later clarifying that he hasn’t filmed the group, at least not since they started calling themselves IS. Another bizarre story involving terrorists was when Jón had Bin Laden interview tapes sent by FedEx to the workplace of his partner Valérie. “I wasn’t in town so I had to have them sent to her workplace. She’s a manager at a Jewish bank in Geneva. When the tapes arrived, the police were called and the bank was put into lockdown.” The pro- duction company in Los Angeles for which he shot the interview had been having problems converting the tapes so they sent them back to him. “But the idiots marked them ‘Interview Bin Laden.’ It took a while to calm the situation down and explain that the Bin Laden in question was not Osama but his sister-in-law, author Carmen Bin Laden.” When he’s working as a cameraman in the field, Jón says he’s usually accompa- nied by three to four people, including a fixer/interpreter, driver and journalist. Traveling on an Icelandic passport can have its pros and cons, he says. “I’ve had colleagues who have been held because they’re American, or even Danish after the [Prophet] Muhammad drawings appeared, but being Icelandic is very good in such situations. However, I now also have a Swiss passport. I don’t want to be a burden on our small foreign office. The Swiss, on the other hand, have the means to send in a plane to evacuate us and have already done so. Then it’s good to have a red passport instead of a blue one so as not to be left JOURNALISM From above: Setting up camp for the night in the Central African Republic, 2010. Traveling with the standard “escort service” in Somalia, 2011. The fall of Sirte, Gaddafi’s hometown, Libya, 2011. With rebels in the Central African Republic, 2010. ...and the government forces in the Central African Republic, 2010. P H O TO B Y M A R K O K O K IC . P H O TO B Y M A R C A LL G O W E R . P H O TO B Y S E B A S TI A N F A U R E . P H O TO B Y M A R K O K O K IC . P H O TO B Y M A R K O K O K IC .
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