This week, hundreds of thousands of people watched a man being burned alive.
If you made the decision not to watch this video, you gave the victim dignity in death. But in doing so, did you also let his murderers off the hook?
This week a video was released by the militant terrorist group known as Islamic State or Isis or Isil (among other names).
That video showed a man being burned to death in a cage and then crushed by a bulldozer. That man was Jordanian pilot Muadh al-Kasasbeh, who had been held captive by Islamic State since his F-16 fighter jet was shot down over Syria during a US bombing raid on Christmas Eve.
This is the latest in a series of videos of Islamic State militants killing hostages. Each video is shot, curated, choreographed and edited to shock world leaders and frighten viewers.
But they also serve another purpose. These videos are vital propaganda for Isis. A second video was released yesterday of the pilot’s death being shown on a huge screen in Raqqa, the de facto capital of Isis in Syria. The video shows a cheering crowd watching the footage and the smiling face of a child (no older than eight) who says, “If he was here, I’d burn him by my hand. I wish to capture pilots and burn them”.
Read more: Islamic State use baby pictures as propaganda.
So, the murder videos are both internal and external marketing material for Islamic State. They tell the world about Isis’s actions and demands and give their supporters a rallying point.
The question is: what are Australians supposed to do with these videos?