Sean Langan (born 1964) is a British journalist and documentary film-maker. Langan works in dangerous and volatile situations; including environments noted for war, conflict and civil unrest. In 2008 he was kidnapped along with his translator while filming in the Afghanistan-Pakistan border region. They were freed three months later after Langan's family had negotiated their release.[1][2][3]

Sean Langan
Born1964 (age 59–60)
Occupation(s)Journalist and documentary filmmaker

The ordeal, ransom and criticisms

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Bafta nominee Sean Langan, 43, who was working for Channel 4's "Dispatches" television series when he was abducted in March by the Taliban in the Afghanistan-Pakistan border, was "safe and well" after release on 21 June 2008 in Islamabad, Pakistan.

Langan was held hostage by the Taliban for 12 weeks after trying to make contact with Al-Qaeda's second in command, as he searched for associates of Osama bin Laden. Langan stated he believed Channel 4 paid "compensation" to those who held him for his release. In his first broadcast interview since the release, Channel 4 News presenter Jon Snow asked whether a ransom had been paid. Langan replied: "No. I think a bit of compensation, not to the Taliban, but to some of the people in the house I believe, but I don't know." Channel 4's position was: "This was a very complex and delicate negotiation and Channel 4 provided Sean's family with support and expert advice. We don't think it is appropriate to go into the detail of the dialogue that was necessary to secure Sean's release. We shared information with the Foreign Office throughout this process."[4][5]

After suffering mock executions, Langan and his translator Sami were freed and sent back to Britain: "I thought it would be a miracle if I got out of there alive. Death was at my door every night. It makes you see your life like never before. It was a constant barrage. They could hear machine guns, anti-aircraft guns and rocket-propelled grenades going off the whole time. But they weren't being shot in a contact [firefight] – it sounded like training. The door would be kicked in in the middle of the night and they'd tell the translator that they were going to behead us.'" He lost 19 kilograms due to dysentery at a Pakistan's Federally Administered Tribal Area (FATA) mountain. Imprisoned in a small, darkened basement cell, which had a hole in the ground for a toilet, they were brought 2 meals a day of bread and "stringy" meat.

The Foreign Office was "furious" at the ransom of Langan, for it "will increase the risk of Britons being kidnapped in future."[6]

On March 2024 Australian Broadcasting Corporation aired a documentary titled "Ukraine's War: The Other Side," by Sean Langan which has been criticised by Ukrainian ambassador Vasyl Myroshnychenko as the "journalistic equivalent of a bowl of vomit" and seemed to repeat Russian justification for the War in Ukraine and structured in a way that seems to favor the Russian side.[7] The ABC has defended its position with a spokesperson stating "we believe Australian audiences also have the right to watch it and make up their own minds."[8]

Films

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Awards

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ afp.google.com, British reporter released from capture after three months
  2. ^ mirror.co.uk, Afghans release C4 journalist
  3. ^ timesonline.co.uk, Film-maker Sean Langan kidnapped in Afghanistan is set free
  4. ^ guardian.co.uk, Channel 4 paid my captors, says kidnapped documentary maker
  5. ^ timesonline.co.uk,
  6. ^ independent.co.uk, When the life of a hostage lies in their hands
  7. ^ Sabbagh, Dan (19 February 2024). "UK documentary listens to both sides on Ukraine's frontline with Russia". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 7 September 2024.
  8. ^ Meade, Amanda (19 March 2024). "ABC defends broadcasting Russia-Ukraine war documentary after ambassador calls it 'bowl of vomit'". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 7 September 2024.
  9. ^ Ukraine's War: The Other Side Episode Week 08 | Press Centre