Steve Inskeep appears in the following:
In Venezuela, A Family Blames The Police For Their Misery
Monday, June 10, 2013
The story of Venezuela's Eloisa Barrios is especially revealing because so many of her relatives have been killed. Revealing because of who she believes pulled the trigger.
Some weeks ago, Barrios climbed into our van for a drive to a cemetery. The burial ground is outside a village in the ...
For Venezuelans, Kidnappings Are Simply Business As Usual
Thursday, June 06, 2013
German Garcia-Velutini got into his car and left work one day. It took him 11 months to get home.
Kidnappers had nabbed the Venezuelan banker. His abduction is part of a problem that's been getting worse every year for the past decade in Venezuela, which belongs to a region riddled ...
A City Of Assad Supporters In War-Ravaged Syria
Sunday, June 02, 2013
Many people in Syria are accustomed to the sound of daily gunfire. It is normal in battle-scarred cities like Damascus or Qusair.
But along the beaches and in the cafes of Tartous, an area that is a center of support for the embattled President Bashar Assad, the sounds are a ...
Watching From The Rooftops As A Fierce Syrian Battle Unfolds
Friday, May 31, 2013
Syria's government appears to be making gains this week in a battle against rebel forces in the key city of Qusair, along the border with Lebanon. NPR's Steve Inskeep traveled to the edge of the city, and we hear from him first, followed by Kelly McEvers, who reports from just ...
Syria's Civil War: The View From A Damascus Shrine
Wednesday, May 29, 2013
Traveling to Damascus gives you a view of Syria's war turned inside out.
The international community talks of arming Syria's rebels against President Bashar Assad, but in the capital many people still hope the rebels will lose.
That's the thinking we found around a Muslim shrine in Damascus, ...
In Damascus, A View Of Syria's War Turned Inside Out
Tuesday, May 28, 2013
Many years ago, the president of Syria, Hafez al-Assad, approved the construction of a new presidential residence on a mountainside above Damascus.
Assad never occupied the building, saying his successor should take it. When his son Bashar Assad became that successor, he didn't move into the house, either. He preferred ...