Rory Carroll is an Irish journalist working for The Guardian who has reported from Iraq and Latin America.
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Born in Dublin, Carroll is a graduate of Blackrock College, Trinity College and Dublin City University. He reported for the paper from Rome (1999–2002) and Johannesburg (2002–2005), before volunteering to work in Baghdad from January 2005.
Carroll's article about Hamilton Naki that appeared in The Guardian in 2003,[1] which was cited by the New York Times as the original source of their erroneous reporting in 2005[2] about the role Hamilton Naki played when the first heart transplant was performed at Groote Schuur Hospital in Cape Town, South Africa in 1967.
On October 19, 2005 he was abducted in Baghdad after carrying out an interview with a victim of Saddam Hussein's regime. The interview had been arranged with the assistance of the Baghdad office of Moqtada al-Sadr. Carroll was released unharmed by his captors a day later.
In April 2006 he was appointed The Guardian's Latin America correspondent, based in the newspaper's Caracas bureau.[3] His reporting from Caracas was criticised by Red Pepper in 2008 for what was judged to be a trend of misrepresentation of the Venezuelan reality and its leader, Hugo Chávez. Carroll also said that he is "not a champion of impartiality", but he says he is open-minded: "I see a government that is doing some good things and some bad things ".[4]
"I try to give a sense of how bizarre and funny some things are,"..."like when Chávez, on his own [weekly] TV show, Aló Presidente, ordered the mobilisation of 9,000 soldiers and tanks to the Colombian border. On the one hand that's a serious story, but there is bombast too ... mobilisation on that scale never happened."[5]
On 3 July 2011, The Observer published an article by Carroll featuring an interview with Noam Chomsky concerning the detention of Maria Lourdes Afiuni, an arrested Venezuelan judge, in which Chomsky criticised the government of Hugo Chávez.[6] Chomsky said in an email exchange with the Znet blogger Joe Emersberger that the report was "deceptive" because of the omission of his comparison of the case of Bradley Manning with the arrested Venezuelan judge, among other points, and rejected the assertion that Venezuela was less democratic than before Chávez took office: "I don’t think so, and never suggested it."[7] The Guardian, sister paper of The Observer, reproduced the entire transcript of Carroll's exchange with Chomsky the following day on its website.[8]
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