The Borneo Post

Live from Idlib, an American broadcasts from Syria’s last rebel zone

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BEIRUT: Pointing to a green screen as if presenting a weather forecast, Bilal Abdul Kareem analyses the Turkish-Russian deal over Syria’s Idlib, broadcasti­ng in his native English from inside the war-torn country’s last rebel stronghold.

The 47-year- old American convert to Islam is a long way from where he grew up near the Bronx, watching reruns of ‘Rocky’ and eating at Italian restaurant­s.

Dressed in a charcoal suit jacket, the broad-shouldered and bearded Abdul Kareem stares into the camera and insists: “In this deal, this specific deal, nobody can say the rebels were not winners.”

For the past six years, he has reported from shrinking rebel territory in Syria’s north, filming the aftermath of airstrikes, interviewi­ng hardline fighters, even meeting Al-Qaeda members.

His contacts, including in the jihadist-led Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), have granted him extensive access at a time when the risk of abduction makes much of Syria too dangerous for journalist­s from mainstream news outlets.

But it has also prompted allegation­s that Abdul Kareem is a ‘jihadist propagandi­st’ and would not have survived in the area had he been an impartial journalist — particular­ly given HTS’s history of harsh crackdowns against perceived foes.

Speaking to AFP from Idlib over Skype, Whatsapp, and Facebook, Abdul Kareem denied the claims and directed accusation­s of his own: he is suing the US government for allegedly trying to kill him in Syria.

As the case drags through US courts, the self- described “baldheaded black guy in the middle of Syria” has remained in Idlib despite fears of a looming regime offensive, continuing to file dispatches for his media upstart, On the Ground News. Born Darrell Lamont Phelps, Abdul Kareem converted to Islam before moving to the Middle East in 2002.

He married and had children in Egypt, but declined to disclose their location for security reasons.

He arrived in Syria in 2012 from Libya, curious about the rebels battling President Bashar alAssad’s forces in a conflict which at that point was just a year old.

Working first with major broadcaste­rs including CNN, he founded OGN in 2015 as editors started to express ‘doubts’ about his political stances, he said.

The channel now publishes on YouTube, Twitter, and a Facebook page with more than 86,000 followers.

“I have a good working relationsh­ip with every group, which doesn’t necessaril­y mean I agree with everything they do or they agree with everything I do,” he said.

A normal day begins with dawn prayers at 4.30am, followed by a routine search of his car for bombs. The rest is up to the news cycle. — AFP

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