(RSF/IFEX) – RSF has called on the Iraqi army to explain at once why its soldiers shot and seriously wounded Associated Press Television News (APTN) cameraman Abdul Kamil Hassan on 7 September 2005. The organisation accused “those responsible for restoring order in Iraq – the Iraqi army and police and US troops” of becoming “serious […]
(RSF/IFEX) – RSF has called on the Iraqi army to explain at once why its soldiers shot and seriously wounded Associated Press Television News (APTN) cameraman Abdul Kamil Hassan on 7 September 2005. The organisation accused “those responsible for restoring order in Iraq – the Iraqi army and police and US troops” of becoming “serious persecutors” of journalists in recent months.
“Iraqi and Arab journalists working for international news agencies have a vital function as they are currently the only ones who can tell us what is happening amid the chaos in Iraq,” RSF said, urging Iraqi and US officials to take “energetic steps to halt the growing threats and dangers to news agency employees.”
Hassan was wounded while filming a site in Samarra (100 km north of Baghdad) where a home-made bomb had been found. Iraqi troops followed him and opened fire, hitting him in the arm and stomach. They then took him to the city hospital, where his life is not in danger.
The Associated Press (AP) news agency has been hard hit since the start of the war in Iraq. Cameraman Saleh Ibrahim was killed on 23 April in an explosion probably aimed at US troops (see IFEX alerts of 26 and 25 April 2005). Another employee, Ismaïl Taher Mohsin, was killed on 2 September 2004. APTN journalist Sami Shuker Naji has been in Abu Ghraib prison since 30 March 2005 for supposedly collaborating with “insurgents.”
Local journalists working for Reuters news agency have also been victims of violence over the past week. On 28 August, Reuters TV soundman Waleed Khaled was killed and cameraman Haider Khadem, who was with him, was injured and held by US troops for three days (see alerts of 8 September, 31 and 29 August 2005). Another Reuters TV cameraman, Ali Omar Abrahem al-Mashadani, has been held by the US army since 10 August.
Agence France-Presse (AFP) and Reuters photographers have also been roughed up recently by Iraqi police and have filed complaints at the prime minister’s office.