IRAQ WAR - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
Reporting Iraq: Liberation's Limits: "accidental" deaths of independent journalists |
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by Felicity Arbuthnot The Centre for Research on Globalisation Entered into the database on Friday, February 17th, 2006 @ 16:00:33 MST |
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The Geneva Conventions afford special protections to journalists in
war zones, legally entitling them to greater autonomy than other civilian non-combatants.
In particular, they can only be detained "for imperative reasons of security".
If held, they must be given the same legal protection as a prisoner of war.
The Pentagon seemingly does not have a copy of the Conventions to hand. A week
before the invasion of Iraq, veteran BBC correspondent Kate Adie, in an astonishing
interview with Irish television, revealed that the Pentagon had intimated that
it would target the satellite transmission uplinks of journalists not embedded
with the military. They would be, "targeted down... who cares... they've
been warned," a spokesman was quoted as remarking. Veteran ITV News correspondent Terry Lloyd, the invasion's first journalist
casualty, had just celebrated 20 years with the network when he was fired on
by US marines near Al-Zubayr in southern Iraq, 22 March 2003, according to a
subsequent investigation by the Wall Street Journal. Reports are confusing,
but US troops were quoted as recalling firing on a car marked "TV".
Belgian cameraman Fred Nerac and Lebanese translator Hussein Othman travelling
with Lloyd disappeared and cameraman Daniel Demoustier, also Belgian, was injured
but survived and said he saw nothing of what happened. Lloyd's body was subsequently
found in a Basra hospital. Nerac's wife approached then US Secretary of State
Colin Powell at a NATO press conference. Powell promised to do all that he could
to find the missing men, as did the British Ministry of Defence. Three years
on, nothing is much clearer. A litany of correspondents' accidental deaths from missiles, mines, explosives
during the invasion are, with other civilians, testimony to war's brutality;
failing miracles, a terrible inevitability. However, even before the obscene
statue toppling of 9 April 2003, the US had some tragic close encounters with
independent news gatherers. Tareq Ayoub was working for Qatar-based Al-Jazeera
television and was killed 8 April when a US missile hit his Baghdad bureau;
cameraman Zouhair Nadhim was injured. As with their bureau in Afghanistan, bombed
November 2001, the exact co-ordinates of their building had (24 February 2003)
been trustingly sent to the Pentagon and acknowledged by State Department official
Nabeel Khoury. Maher Abdullah, the station's producer said a US plane flew so
low over the clearly marked building that he thought it was going to crash into
it. Then the missile struck. Another US plane, he said, flew equally low 15
minutes later, dropping a missile about 15 metres away which blew the building's
door off its hinges. Moments later, nearby Abu Dhabi TV -- their building also distinctively marked
-- came under machinegun fire from a tank little more than yards away. Al-Jazeera
was accused by US spokespeople of having links to Al-Qaeda. Chillingly, Al-Jazeera
correspondent, Sudanese Sami Muhieddin Al-Haj has been held in Guantanamo since
2001. His lawyer, renowned human rights attorney Clive Stafford Smith, says
he is in "pitiful" conditions, has suffered "horrendous physical,
sexual and religious persecution," and was pressured to say Al-Jazeera
is connected to Al-Qaeda in exchange for US citizenship. He is charged with
"trying to go to Afghanistan", says Stafford Smith, which of course
he was, in line of business, with a legitimate visa. In another incident 8 April 2003, Jose Couso, cameraman for Spanish television
Telenco, and Taras Protsyuk, Ukrainian cameraman for Reuters, were killed when
a US tank fired on the Palestine Hotel. Major General Buford Blount, commanding
the US Army's third Infantry Division said it was a "proportionate response"
to small arms fire from the hotel. The 200-odd journalists staying there said
there was no fire from the hotel while the unit that fired were reported as
saying they were unaware they were firing at the Palestine -- at the time probably
the most pictured hotel on earth, with a memorably unusual design. US soldiers also killed Mazen Dana, veteran conflict cameraman for Reuters,
17 August 2003, whilst he was filming outside Abu Ghraib prison, west of Baghdad.
US military officials said the soldiers who had fired at him mistook his camera
for an RPG. Dana, according to his soundman, Nael Shyioukhi, had obtained credentials
from the US military on Baghdad, identified himself to the US military, even
asking if they had a spokesperson available to speak on camera. Other reporters
were also there, and Dana's request to film from a nearby bridge was granted
by the military. Experts who train war correspondents said a camera from the
distance Dana was (50 to 100 metres) could not be mistaken for an RPG. Dana
had reportedly telephoned his brother the night before saying he had discovered
and filmed a pit of dead people wrapped in clear heavy plastic, ready it seemed
to be filled over. He had linked the finding to the US military. The results
of the US investigation into his death have not been made public. US Central
Command told the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) it was "regrettable". When those with foreign passports, hidden agendas, private militias and armies
rolled in to Iraq and "came to power on a CIA train", according to
a spokesman for Ahmed Chalabi's Iraqi National Congress, assessing factions
in a complex society became near impossible, even for Iraqis. It is a "new
Iraq" indeed. Whilst press freedom was curtailed under Saddam Hussein's
regime, Western journalists often filing uncomplimentary stories from Jordan,
journalists largely stayed alive. According to the CPJ, 60 journalists have
been killed March 2003 to September 2005; 37 have been Iraqi. In context, the
next most dangerous place for journalists has been Columbia, where 28 died between
1996 and 2006. Further, on 29 January 2004, the US-appointed Interim Governing Council (IGC)
barred Al-Jazeera from covering their press conferences. Two days earlier the
station had aired a programme alleging Israeli infiltration into Iraq, and alleging
a secret visit by Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon the previous December.
The small circulation Shia Al-Hawza newspaper was closed down March 2004; US
troops sealed the building after the paper alleged that the invasion was a war
on Islam and was not about democracy but rather oil. It also claimed that a
cited "car bomb" had been a US missile. Press freedom in Iraq, many
were saying, was as mythical as under Saddam. Whilst foreign correspondents killed, kidnapped and disappeared in
Iraq makes world headlines, their Arab and Iraqi colleagues are largely forgotten.
What is remarkable is how many have been killed, allegedly, by a seemingly unaccountable
US military. Assad Khadim Ali and his driver Hussein Saleh of (US funded)
Al-Iraqiya TV were confirmed by Brigadier General Mark Kimmitt as being killed
by US forces in the ancient city of Samara; Duraid Isa Mohamed of CNN and his
driver Yasser Khatab on 27 April 2004; Rashid Hamid Wali of Al-Jazeera killed
by a single expert gunshot to the head, filming US troops fighting in Karbala
21 May 2004. Iraqi cameraman Mahmoud Abbas, working for German TV, and friend
and colleague, Isam Al-Shumari, also with Germany's N24 network, were killed
and disappeared, respectively, after filming US "bombardments" of
homes in Falluja. One week after the IGC banned Al-Jazeera from Iraq, in September 2004, Mazan
Al-Tumeizi, reporter for Al-Arabiya was killed on air, in Baghdad's Haifa Street.
Hit by undisputed US fire, he doubled over, crying: "I'm dying, I'm dying."
US military accounts differ; one being that they had fired on a disabled Bradley
fighting vehicle, to "prevent it being looted". Seif Fouad of Reuters
and Shaith Ahad of Getty Images were hospitalised. 2005 was an equally woeful year for Iraqi and other Arab journalists, increasingly
in demand by Western media in a country too dangerous now for foreigners to
move around. Iraqis, suffering rising costs and stratospheric inflation, need
hard currency and take heart-wrenching risks to earn it. Anne Cooper, CPJ's
executive director, comments that apart from killings, seven cases of detentions
by US forces and "numerous" other reports of incidents have been filed
with CPJ. They involve reporters working with CBS, AP, AFP, and others. "But
because of military secrecy we are unable to confirm [or move further]."
Perhaps one journalist represents all in 2005-6. Salam Al-Jabouri, a young
reporter and translator, was working with British freelancer Phil Sands last
December. In June, he was a juror at the World Tribunal on Iraq (WTI) in Istanbul,
judging occupation atrocities. In December, he offered the opening hearing of
the WTI, The Brussells Tribunal, an article on Iraq's secret prisons. They were,
he wrote, run under US auspices by Iranian militia in Medain, Kut, Baladiyat
and Hilla (Babylon). Al-Jabouri's friend Majid, 27, with three brothers and
an uncle had been arrested and taken to one in October 2005. Blindfolded, hit
with sticks and pipes; Al-Jabouri recorded their plight. One brother, Hamed,
was made to carry bodies of people who had died under torture to trucks, driven
away, Hamed speculated, to be thrown into the river, or dumped in deserted areas.
The ground he was toiling through, said Al-Jabouri's friend, was blood covered.
"They are a shame on Islam; not Muslim," he wrote of the torturers. Brussells Tribunal member, Dirk Adriaensens, advised that Al-Jabouri did not
put his full name on the article. Al-Jabouri wanted to stand by it and insisted.
He had told Adriaensens, during the Istanbul hearings, of the loss of his father
in 2000. "I'll be your father," said Adriaensens, "and after
that he always called me 'dad.' Perhaps he should have listened to his dad's
advice." Kidnapped with Sands and their driver Abdullah on Christmas Eve,
they were apparently stumbled on by the US military during a sweep of the area
on New Year's Eve. Sands, reports confirm, was flown to Dubai, interrogated
for a week by British officers, then returned to the UK. Al-Jabouri and Abdullah
were held, seemingly sent to the US prison at Camp Bucca near Basra and subsequently
transferred to the notorious Abu Ghraib. Held without charge, Al-Jabouri was
released after just under six weeks, on 12 February. No further details are
yet known. Driver Abdullah has become the face of Iraq's numberless "liberated"
disappeared, his fate unknown. Last November, Kevin Maguire, associate editor of the UK's Daily Mirror
and an astute, streetwise Middle East watcher, claimed that President Bush had
been narrowly dissuaded by British Prime Minister Tony Blair from bombing Al-Jazeera's
headquarters in Qatar. The British government dismissed Bush's alleged suggestion
as "humorous". Al-Jazeera has demanded the relevant memo; no one has
sued The Mirror.In the new world order -- particularly the "new Iraq"
-- being a journalist or media support worker in countries where "freedom
and democracy" has been declared by the US and UK is like playing Russian
roulette with a full chamber. |