Take pictures of coffins and get fired

  • Wanna Join? New users you can now register lightning fast using your Facebook or Twitter accounts.
May 13, 2002
49,944
47,801
113
44
Seattle
www.socialistworld.net
#1






Woman loses her job over coffins photo

By Hal Bernton
Seattle Times staff reporter


A military contractor has fired Tami Silicio, a Kuwait-based cargo worker whose photograph of flag-draped coffins of fallen U.S. soldiers was published in Sunday's edition of The Seattle Times.

Silicio was let go yesterday for violating U.S. government and company regulations, said William Silva, president of Maytag Aircraft, the contractor that employed Silicio at Kuwait International Airport.

"I feel like I was hit in the chest with a steel bar and got my wind knocked out. I have to admit I liked my job, and I liked what I did," Silicio said.

Her photograph, taken earlier this month, shows more than 20 flag-draped coffins in a cargo plane about to depart from Kuwait. Since 1991, the Pentagon has banned the media from taking pictures of caskets being returned to the United States.

That policy has been a lightning rod for debate, and Silicio's photograph was quickly posted on numerous Internet sites and became the subject of many Web conversations. Times Executive Editor Michael R. Fancher yesterday appeared on ABC's "Good Morning America" news show with U.S. Rep. Mike Castle, R-Del., who supported the Pentagon policy prohibiting such pictures.



Tami Silicio's photo fueled a debate over a U.S. policy on casket images.


As a result of the broader coverage, The Times received numerous e-mails and phone calls from across the country — most of which supported the newspaper's decision.

Pentagon officials yesterday said the government's policy defers to the sensitivities of bereaved families. "We've made sure that all of the installations who are involved with the transfer of remains were aware that we do not allow any media coverage of any of the stops until (the casket) reaches its final destination," said Cynthia Colin, a Pentagon spokeswoman.

Maytag also fired David Landry, a co-worker who recently wed Silicio.

Silicio said she never sought to put herself in the public spotlight. Instead, she said, she hoped the publication of the photo would help families of fallen soldiers understand the care and devotion that civilians and military crews dedicate to the task of returning the soldiers home.

"It wasn't my intent to lose my job or become famous or anything," Silicio said.

The Times received Silicio's photograph from a stateside friend, Amy Katz, who had previously worked with Silicio for a different contractor in Kosovo. Silicio then gave The Times permission to publish it, without compensation. It was paired with an article about her work in Kuwait.

Silicio, 50, is from Edmonds and previously worked as an events decorator in the Seattle area and as a truck driver in Kosovo. Before the war started, she went to work for Maytag, which contracts with the Air Mobility Command to provide air-terminal and ground-handling services in Kuwait.

In Kuwait, Silicio pulled 12-hour night shifts alongside military workers to help in the huge effort to resupply U.S. troops. These workers also helped transport the remains of soldiers back to the United States.

Her job put her in contact with soldiers who sometimes accompanied the coffins to the airport. Having lost one of her own sons to a brain tumor, Silicio said, she tried to offer support to those grieving over a lost comrade.

"It kind of helps me to know what these mothers are going through, and I try to watch over their children as they head home," she said in an earlier interview.

Since Sunday, Silicio has hunkered down in Kuwait as her employer and the military decided her fate.

Maytag's Silva said the decision to terminate Silicio's and Landry's employment was made by the company. But he said the U.S. military had identified "very specific concerns" about their actions. Silva declined to detail those concerns.

"They were good workers, and we were sorry to lose them," Silva said. "They did a good job out in Kuwait and it was an important job that they did."

Landry, in an e-mail to The Times, said he was proud of his wife, and that they would soon return home to the States.

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/cg...ion_id=268448413&slug=coffin22m&date=20040422
 
Dec 25, 2003
12,356
218
0
69
#2
It's a coffin, it's not like she was photographing a European Lark. Anything in that arena is going to be a touchy subject. I don't know what else she was expecting.
 
May 13, 2002
49,944
47,801
113
44
Seattle
www.socialistworld.net
#3
I don't give a shit about the broad getting fired, but I don't like the US policy of banning all photos of US casaulties. It's perfectly fine to show pictures of dead arabs, dead dictators children, dead gangsters etc. but as soon as the public sees images of reality of war, it's unnexceptable.
 

shep

Sicc OG
Oct 2, 2002
3,233
2
0
#5
2-0-Sixx said:
I don't give a shit about the broad getting fired, but I don't like the US policy of banning all photos of US casaulties. It's perfectly fine to show pictures of dead arabs, dead dictators children, dead gangsters etc. but as soon as the public sees images of reality of war, it's unnexceptable.
another double standard by the us. we are outraged when they show our captured troops on tv in the ME cause it's against the geneva convention, and then what do we do when we catch saddam? break the geneva convention and show his medical exam on tv.

don't you know 2-0... if people see the coffins that are coming home, then they will realize that this war is BS and innocent people are dieing, but if you don't show it, then people don't become outraged, and the pres gets his war
 
Feb 9, 2003
8,398
58
48
50
#6
2-0-Sixx said:
I don't give a shit about the broad getting fired, but I don't like the US policy of banning all photos of US casaulties. It's perfectly fine to show pictures of dead arabs, dead dictators children, dead gangsters etc. but as soon as the public sees images of reality of war, it's unnexceptable.
I think they do this because of what happened when people showed photos of US casualties in the 60's.
 
Mar 14, 2003
869
2
18
#9
shep said:
another double standard by the us. we are outraged when they show our captured troops on tv in the ME cause it's against the geneva convention, and then what do we do when we catch saddam? break the geneva convention and show his medical exam on tv.
On the flipside to that the Iraqi's weren't going to beleive us without those images (Saddam and Uday/Qusay).

I agree with policy, but i realize it's very hypocritical.
 

I AM

Some Random Asshole
Apr 25, 2002
21,002
86
48
#12
i agree with 2-0-sixx, it's all good to show anything that isn't related to our country....but as soon as someone does they get fired....that's our wonderful country people! i'm ready to move to vancouver bc....lol...
 

DubbC415

Mickey Fallon
Sep 10, 2002
22,620
6,984
0
38
Tomato Alley
#13
Thats the way a lot of our country is...they support the "good" things, such as "my forefathers faught in wars so i can be free." but when it comes to something bad-"it wasnt ME who had slaves, that was my ancestors a hunned-fifty years ago, dont get angry at me about that." people want to take credit for something good that they didnt even do, but when it comes to something bad, it wasnt their fault.
 
May 16, 2002
454
2
0
40
#14
Here's a picture from a campaign ad* of a body being removed from Ground Zero :




*hint: it's the campaign ad to the son of the person who created the policy of not showing the coffins of dead soldiers