Sergeant Adam Gray made it home from Iraq only to die in his barracks. Investigating his death, American RadioWorks pieces together a story of soldiers suffering psychological scars – because they abused Iraqi prisoners.
Iraq
Awakening to corruption in Falluja
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| Sheikh Eifan Saddun al-Isawi poses with George W. Bush. |
Shane Bauer, a CIR correspondent, writes for Mother Jones about how the Pentagon bought stability in Iraq by funneling billions of taxpayer dollars to the country's next generation of strongmen.
Lawlessness and sectarian violence quickly engulfed Iraq after the fall of Saddam, leaving women especially vulnerable. Correspondent Anna Badkhen and photojournalist Mimi Chakarova visited a secret women's shelter in Baghdad to meet with rape victims and war widows and document their stories. CIR spoke to the reporters in their hotel room in Baghdad via Skype for this episode of The Investigators.
The Investigators is CIR's web-video series highlighting investigative reporting—as it happens—by journalists around the world.
Anna Badkhen has covered wars in Afghanistan, Somalia, Israel and the Palestinian territories, Chechnya and Kashmir. She has reported extensively from Iraq since 2003. Her reporting has appeared in the San Francisco Chronicle, The Boston Globe, The Christian Science Monitor, The National, FRONTLINE/World, Truthdig, and Salon. Her book, "A War Reporter's Pantry," will be published in January 2011 by Free Press/Simon&Schuster. Read her reporter's blog for CIR.
Mimi Chakarova is a photojournalist and photography instructor at UC Berkeley's Graduate School of Journalism. Her solo exhibitions include documentary projects on South Africa, Jamaica, Cuba, Kashmir and Eastern Europe. She is currently working on two long-term projects that examine the conflict in Kashmir and sex trafficking of women in Eastern Europe. Her work has appeared in National Geographic, The New York Times Sunday Magazine, The Atlantic Monthly, CBS News 60 Minutes, and FRONTLINE/World.
Learn more about this story on FRONTLINE/World: "Iraq: Living in Hiding"
Support for this project was provided in part by CIR's Dick Goldensohn Fund.
PRODUCED AND EDITED BY CARRIE CHING
PHOTOGRAPHY AND VIDEO BY MIMI CHAKAROVA
Lawlessness and sectarian violence quickly engulfed Iraq after the fall of Saddam, leaving women vulnerable. Human rights groups say incidents of rape have increased, and by Iraqi tradition the victims are shunned and sometimes murdered by family members in "honor killings." Correspondent Anna Badkhen and photojournalist Mimi Chakarova visit a secret women's shelter in Baghdad to speak with rape victims and war widows and document their stories.
+ Watch the slideshow on FRONTLINE/World and read the story by Anna Badkhen.
+ Watch CIR's episode of The Investigators featuring Badkhen: "Behind the Veil."
+ Listen to Badkhen talk about her reporting and her article in Ms. Magazine, "Baghdad Underground," on PRI's The World.
Support for this project was provided in part by CIR's Dick Goldensohn Fund.

Baghdad | Los Angeles, a four-month collaboration between the Annenberg School for Communication at USC and the Center for Investigative Reporting in Berkeley, explores the impact of the Iraq war in Southern California. Stories include: a profile of the Junior ROTC program at Hollywood High School; the tale of an undocumented Mexican, in the U.S. since the age of three, who wants nothing more than to serve in the U.S. military, but can’t; stories of Iraqi exiles with roots in Southern California who’ve returned to help rebuild their country; a “biography of a fighter jet,” from Southern California assembly line to payload delivery in Iraq; an analysis of the U.S. Army’s advertising strategy in light of an unpopular war; and a first person essay by a reporter whose father’s secret defense-industry work has its own ties to Iraq.
The project began as part of Sandy Tolan’s “Reporting in Los Angeles” class at the Annenberg School. The class’s goal was to examine how the war in Iraq, in direct and indirect ways, has played a role in the lives of a diverse group of Californians. The challenge was to find untold stories and to tell them in new ways in a digital format. Student reporters explored ideas during regular class sessions and with extensive consultation with colleagues from CIR. The reporters were encouraged to come up with their own ideas and interpretations of the connections between Iraq and Southern California.
Student reporters are Janna Brancolini, Lara Coger, Daniela Gerson, Alex Herbach, Michelle Lanz, Catherine Lyons, Chris Nelson, and Jean Yung. Special thanks to CIR’s director, Robert Rosenthal, and editorial director, Mark Schapiro. Thanks also to CIR’s web producer, Carrie Ching, to Wendy Chapman, Director of Web Technologies at Annenberg, and to Chris Nelson, who designed and set up the project website.
The editors would also like to thank Dan Birman, executive producer for USC Annenberg’s student-produced newsmagazine series, Impact, and to Impact’s Lee Warner, for their generosity in facilitating access to Jean Yung’s story, “A Helping Hand for the Cadets of Hollywood High.”
>> Visit the Baghdad | Los Angeles website
>> Download press release
Two photographers create unvarnished images of the Iraq war and its tragic consequences here at home.
Reporting from Nepal, Jordan and Iraq, the Chicago Tribune's Cam Simpson uncovers a vast human trafficking network.




