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NBC's Richard Engel released in Syria, a journalist danger zone

The Syrian conflict is making 2012 the deadliest year on record for journalists.

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Anadolu via AP TV/AP
In this image made from video, NBC News Chief Correspondent Richard Engel exits a car after crossing back into Turkey, after Engel and his team were freed unharmed following a firefight at a checkpoint after five days of captivity inside Syria, in Cilvegozu, Turkey, Tuesday, Dec. 18.

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NBC News Chief Correspondent Richard Engel and three members of his production crew were released safely from captivity last night, five days after being kidnapped in Syria, . It is unclear who is responsible for the kidnapping, but the episode highlights the dangerous nature of reporting in war-torn Syria, a country the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) dubbed this year.

NBC reports that Mr. Engel鈥檚 captors have not been identified but are 鈥渘ot believed to be loyal to the Assad regime.鈥 (Editor's update: Engel later spoke live in Turkey and noted he believed his kidnappers were indeed .) Engel and his team went missing after crossing into Syria from Turkey last week, and there had been no communication with the network 鈥 neither requesting ransom nor laying claim for the kidnapping 鈥 while the team was in captivity.

After entering Syria, Engel and his team were abducted, tossed into the back of a truck and blindfolded before being transported to an unknown location believed to be near the small town of Ma鈥檃rrat Misrin. During their captivity, they were blindfolded and bound, but otherwise not physically harmed, the network said.

Early Monday evening local time, the prisoners were being moved to a new location in a vehicle when their captors ran into a checkpoint manned by members of the Ahrar al-Sham brigade, a Syrian rebel group. There was a confrontation and a firefight ensued.聽 Two of the captors were killed, while an unknown number of others escaped, the network said.

Engel and his team have since re-entered Turkey and say they were unharmed in the incident, NBC reports.

Syria鈥檚 conflict began in March 2011 after a government crackdown on protests calling for President Bashar al-Assad to step down. The violence has spiraled into a bloody civil war that has claimed the lives of close to 40,000 people and , according to the United Nations refugee agency.聽

But, according to The Wall Street Journal, 鈥 the scenarios for how fighting might end or a political transition may be negotiated, and what may come next after the end of the regime.鈥

"The civilian militias to come out of this conflict are going to make Hezbollah [in Lebanon] look like a walk in the park," Joseph Holliday, a senior research analyst at the Institute for the Study of War in Washington, told the Journal. Syria is not simply seeing a faceoff between government forces and rebel fighters, but the involvement of Al Qaeda-linked fighters and Iranian militants have also been noted.

CPJ projects that 2012 will , with 67 journalist deaths registered through mid-December alone. The high numbers are in large part attributed to the conflict in Syria and how it has impacted local and international journalists trying to report there. Four international journalists were killed in Syria in 2012, but the majority of the 28 journalists killed there this year were local reporters, largely working online.

鈥淭his feels like the first YouTube 飞补谤,鈥 BBC Middle East correspondent Paul Wood told CPJ. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a guy with a machine gun and two guys next to him with camera phones.鈥 Mr. Wood added that local journalists are facing multiple risks. 鈥淲e鈥檝e seen pro-regime journalists targeted by rebels 鈥 it is well known. But opposition journalists say the regime is intent on targeting them as journalists.鈥

The number of fatalities related to the Syrian conflict approached the worst annual toll recorded during the war in Iraq, where 32 journalists were killed in both 2006 and 2007.

Paul Wood 鈥 who covered Iraq and numerous other wars, said the Syrian conflict 鈥渋s the most difficult one we鈥檝e done.鈥 Bashar al-Assad鈥檚 government sought to cut off the flow of information by barring entry to international reporters, forcing Wood and many other international journalists to travel clandestinely into Syria to cover the conflict. 鈥淲e鈥檝e hidden in vegetable trucks, been chased by Syrian police 鈥撀爐hings happen when you try to report covertly.鈥

With international journalists blocked and traditional domestic media under state control, citizen journalists picked up cameras and notepads to document the conflict聽鈥撀燼nd at least 13 of them paid the ultimate price. One, , was only 17 years old. At least five of the citizen journalists worked for Damascus-based , whose videos have been used extensively by international news organizations.

Engel is an experienced reporter who reported on the Iraq war in its entirety and has 鈥渃overed wars, revolutions and political transitions around the world over the last 15 years,鈥 according to NBC. But there are many factors making reporting by inexperienced journalists in high-risk countries like Syria increasingly common today.

In addition to the rise of Internet journalism, there are other factors like 鈥渞elatively cheap flights to some of the world鈥檚 trouble spots鈥 and 鈥渟hrinking budgets for foreign news鈥 that 鈥渉ave ,鈥 reports the BBC.

For organisations working to improve the safety of journalists it鈥檚 a cause for increasing concern.

鈥淭here鈥檚 something of a worrying trend developing,鈥 says Hannah Storm, director of the . 鈥淚鈥檓 hearing it from people that have recently graduated. I鈥檓 seeing it on Facebook. And I see it sometimes when I talk to students in universities.

鈥淚t feels like now in places like Syria there are more and more people in their early or mid-20s with little or no experience - but with an overriding enthusiasm which makes them want to go out there and make a name for themselves, without taking the realities on board.鈥

Many of these young reporters are working as freelancers, which can create an additional risk. Freelance reporter Austin Tice has been missing since August when he was kidnapped near Syria鈥檚 capital, Damascus.聽The Monitor reports that the聽number of journalists kidnapped has gone up,聽and "with the rise in the number of reporters operating in dangerous places like Syria 鈥 and with many parties seeing value in targeting them 鈥 many expect the threat to persist.鈥 However, while all journalists reporting in conflict zones can expect to face threats, the increasing number of freelancers can make working in places like Syria 鈥減articularly acute, as they are often operating without significant institutional backing and experience.鈥

"More and more of those journalists are freelancers because of the nature of the changing field," El Zein says, referring to the rise in the number of聽freelancers reporting in dangerous places, traditionally more a world for journalists on the staff of major publications.

"Especially in Syria, the risks are very high for journalists, and a freelancer going in there without any support structure 鈥 it can be very risky and daunting."

海角大神鈥檚 Tom Peter has been in and out of Syria over the course of the past few months and noted other distinct differences in reporting from Syria compared to other conflict zones in the past. 鈥淲ith Aleppo just a two-hour drive from Kilis [Turkey], many journalists have opted to drive into Syria each morning and return to Turkey to write stories and sleep. Not only is it safer, but electricity and Internet access are a sure thing,鈥 he writes.

The commute made my job of writing and filing stories easier, but it also made for a surreal reporting experience. In one afternoon, I might find myself taking cover as windows blew out around me in a bombing. By that evening, I'd be back in Kilis getting my hair cut in a barbershop where a miscommunication led to an accidental mud facial mask.

I've always thought the hardest part of conflict journalism is the anxiety you feel before and after an assignment. When you're navigating a war, you're too busy to think about the what-ifs. Commuting in and out every day creates one of the strangest cycles of stress and decompression I've ever experienced.

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