The sexual assault of Lara Logan: What's the fallout for female journalists?

In the aftermath of the disturbing attack on the CBS correspondent in Egypt, media organizations face tough questions about female reporters' safety

CBS chief foreign correspondent Lara Logan, who has spent years reporting from war zones, is recuperating after her brutal attack in Egypt.
(Image credit: Facebook)

CBS News announced yesterday that its chief foreign correspondent Lara Logan had been the victim of "brutal and sustained sexual assault and beating" while covering the celebrations in Egypt on the eve of President Mubarak's resignation. The correspondent was quickly flown back to the U.S. on Saturday morning, and hospitalized upon her return. She was released today, and is said to be "in remarkably good spirits despite her ordeal." But even as Logan recuperates, many wonder what her treatment at the hands of an Egyptian mob augurs for female reporters in the field:

The media will protect its reporters better: We can only hope this awful news will lead to a "broader push by the Fourth Estate to protect correspondents against assault," says Mac McClelland at Mother Jones. Already, the Committee to Protect Journalists has said it will add a section on sexual assault to its safety handbook. "It's about damn time," too. Already, "too many journalists have suffered similar horrors."

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