Staging violence in Tibet Protest with 'Photoshop's Help'

by korzac | April 5, 2008 at 01:40 am
2228 views | 19 Recommendations | 9 comments

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Staging violence in Tibet Protest with 'Photoshop Help'

Staging violence in Tibet Protest with 'Photoshop Help'

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uploaded by korzac

Fake photos are the holy grail for reshaping the world. Today it is harder to believe that a photo is an authentic document describing what should be an event witnessed by an impartial photographer. A photo has lost his property of evidence, and ironically there is need of evidence to 'prove evidence', perhaps ad infinitum.The following excerpt is a good example.

Evidence is accumulating that the Chinese regime orchestrated violence in Lhasa in order to discredit the peaceful protests of Buddhist monks.

According to the Dalai Lama’s Chinese translator, Ngawang Nyendra, a witness reported that a Chinese policeman in Lhasa disguised himself as a Tibetan and joined the protesters holding a knife in his hand. This witness also recognized the man from BBC news footage and news photos provided by China.

A Chinese woman from Thailand (who prefers that her name not be used) was studying in Lhasa when the protests broke out in March. As one of her friends is a policeman, she visited him at the local police station quite often and got to know other policemen there.

(Photo: The upper portion shows the uncropped photo distributed to news media by the Chinese Embassy, with a Chinese policeman in disguise holding a knife;
The lower portion, the edited version of the same scene distributed by the Chinese Embassy after the man’s identity was revealed at a rally in Darmasala
/ from the Epochtimes website)

After the protests on March 14, she and other foreigners were sent to the police station where she saw a man with a knife in his hand walking in with some arrested Tibetans. The man later took off the Tibetan-style clothes and put on a police uniform.

This woman was sent out of Lhasa with other foreigners the next day. When she arrived in India via Nepal, she recognized the policeman she had seen in Tibetan garb from BBC TV news and photos that the Chinese embassy had provided to the media.

Ngawang Nyendra said the witness was shocked when she saw the policeman in the BBC broadcast. She realized then that the man had disguised himself as a Tibetan in order to incite people to riot.

(photo: Cropped copy of the Chinese policeman that was released by the Chinese Embassy purporting to show a Tibetan with a knife taking part in a riot/ from the Epochtimes website)

The full article is here.

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PEP
PEP
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 04:43 on April 5th, 2008

korzac, I like this story. It's good stuff.

0
korzac

pep, thanks for the flag.

Jordan Yerman
Jordan Yerman
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 05:29 on April 5th, 2008

"The camera never lies", but post-production certainly can.

0
korzac

jordan,  

" 'The camera never lies', but post-production certainly can": good rephrasing of our 'New Brave World'.

Thanks for the comment and GS.

Barry ORegan
Barry ORegan
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 08:17 on April 5th, 2008

korzac, I like this story. It's good stuff. Hence why digital photos are rarely entered as evidence in criminal cases.

0
korzac

Barry, look here at the controversy about using digital photos in court.

Thanks for the comment and GS.

0
Barry ORegan

Thanks Korzac

as they say The pictures are just visual aids. Not proof.

SexySEO
SexySEO
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 13:19 on April 5th, 2008

korzac, thanks for the story!

0
korzac

SexySEO, thanks for the GS.

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