(RSF/IFEX) – Reporters Without Borders has learned of the death of two Iraqi journalists at the hands of armed groups in Baghdad, bringing to 155 the number of media staff killed in Iraq since the start of the conflict in March 2003. The worldwide press freedom organisation on 16 March 2007 held a protest in […]
(RSF/IFEX) – Reporters Without Borders has learned of the death of two Iraqi journalists at the hands of armed groups in Baghdad, bringing to 155 the number of media staff killed in Iraq since the start of the conflict in March 2003.
The worldwide press freedom organisation on 16 March 2007 held a protest in Paris in which 153 activists and volunteers held up photos of 153 leading French journalists behind a banner reading, “And what if it was in France?” to raise public awareness of the full horror of the attacks on the press in Iraq.
Less than one week later the death toll has mounted still further.
The body of Hamid al-Duleimi, 37, a producer on the TV channel al-Nahrain (the two river banks) was found dead on 19 March in the Baghdad morgue. He had been abducted two days previously as he left the channel’s studios. Autopsy reports revealed that the journalist had been tortured. Two other employees of the channel were killed in May 2006 after being stopped at a fake military road block in the Iraqi capital.
The editor of the daily “al-Safir”, Hussein al Jaburi, 63, died from his injuries in a hospital in Amman, Jordan on 16 March, where he was taken for treatment after being ambushed outside his Baghdad home on 11 February.
In addition, there is still no news of Karim Manhal, 48, a commentator on Radio Dijla, who was snatched from his car by four armed and masked men outside the radio station’s studios with his driver, Thamir Sabri. There has been no claim of responsibility for the kidnapping (see IFEX alert of 20 March 2007).
“We salute the determination and courage of the scores of journalists who continue to do their jobs despite these attacks, kidnappings and ambushes targeting the press on a daily basis,” Reporters Without Borders said.
“The Iraqi authorities must urgently set up security and legal structures to combat the impunity, which means that these attacks continue.”