Just
today the “Syrian Observatory for Human Rights”was being cited as
a source by the
Daily Mail
“The
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) said the latest strikes
had killed at least a dozen ISIS fighters late on Thursday.”
By Nimrod Kamer
2
October, 2015
The
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights has been the prime source for
MSM-aired news from the Syrian battlefield. But how much does one
truly know about this UK-based organization and its director?
Journalist and prankster Nimrod Kamer went to find out.
The
organization has been one of the sources for the mainstream media to
build their reports on Syria since the start of the civil war four
years ago. The organization claims to have a wide network of contacts
in the region who feed their information to the head office, where it
is processed and later posted on the website, Facebook and Twitter
accounts.
Since
the start of the Moscow anti-ISIS campaign Russia has started
featuring in its reports as well - and it was quickly picked up by
major Western media outlets. One of the latest wires from the
Observatory that "Russian warplanes [killed] 30 civilians in
Homs including women and children” quickly made it into major news
sources.
“To
the degree people choose to believe social media, they can be my
guest. But quite contrary to what [US Secretary of State John Kerry]
has said, it is a notoriously unreliable tool upon which to base
judgments,” former CIA officer, Ray McGovern told RT.
RT
decided to investigate who the man behind the Syrian Observatory for
Human Rights is and why the media outlet is so popular with MSM.
Well-known journalist and prankster Nimrod Kamer took up the job.
The
two-bedroom Coventry home of Syrian immigrant Rami Abdel Rahman has
been the organization’s base and the source of information for
major mainstream media on anything Syria-related from the past four
years, including the death toll.
Nobody
quite knows who Abdel Rahman has on the ground in Syria, but
information just keeps flowing on and on, usually in a dramatic
fashion and with little detail.
Kamer
walked around the English city of Coventry, approaching people with
questions on Abdel Rahman and how he could be located. No one seemed
to have a clue they had the prime source of news from the Syrian
frontline living right there in their quaint British neighborhood.
Kamer
had no luck catching the director at home. Calling him on the phone,
he found out Abdel Rahman went out to a shop. The journalist went
about explaining that he had hoped to catch the organization’s
director to quiz him on his “media organization” – but that
term was met with hostility on the part of Abdel Rahman.
“I
am not a media organization. I work from my home, my private home.”
The
director of the Observatory seemed very distressed, talking about the
dangers of meeting up for daytime interviews because “they are
trying to kill me.” It was difficult to identify who “they”
were, but Abdel Rahman clearly wasn’t in the mood. He asked Kamer
to send him his name and details, which Abdel Rahman would then send
to the police.
“When
you run a media organization you should expect journalists to come
and ask questions, especially if it’s such a shady and unsourced
media organization… I had a great time.”
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