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Gunmen shot dead 47 civilians and left their bodies in a ditch near
Baghdad Thursday as militia battles and sectarian reprisals followed the bombing
of a sacred Shiite shrine. Sunni Arabs suspended their participation in talks
on a new government.
Three journalists working for Al-Arabiya television, including a prominent
TV female correspondent, were found bullet-riddled and dead in Samarra, the
site of Wednesday's Askariya mosque attack. Al-Arabiya is viewed in Iraq as
favoring the United States.
At least 47 other bodies were found scattered across Iraq, many of them shot
execution-style and dumped in Shiite-dominated parts of Baghdad.
Officials said at least 110 people had been killed across the country in violence
believed triggered by the mosque attack.
The bodies of the noted TV correspondent, Atwar Bahjat, and her cameraman and
soundman were found early Thursday near the city 60 miles north of Baghdad,
local law enforcement officials said.
Bahjat had been reporting live Wednesday from the outskirts of Samarra, which
security forces had sealed off after an explosion at a Shiite mosque.
Officials at the Dubai-based satellite news channel said they lost contact
with their team after their last broadcast at 6 p.m. Wednesday.
A fourth team member managed to escape from the ambush and told police about
the kidnappings. He said two gunmen pulled up in a pickup truck, shooting in
the air and shouting: "We want the correspondent," The Associated
Press quoted Al-Arabiya as reporting.
"Atwar was in the news van and shouted to the crowd to help her. The crew
tried to speak to the gunmen, but they snatched them and took them an unknown
location. By this time, night had fallen," Reuters quoted Al-Arabiya's
Baghdad correspondent Ahmed al-Saleh as telling viewers.
Saleh said the bodies had been dumped near the town of Dawr near Samarra. All
three were Iraqi citizens.
The bullet-riddled bodies were found near their vehicle, cameras and satellite
dish, police Capt. Laith Muhammad told AP.
Saleh said Bahjat "is a victim of telling the truth. ... She loved her
country and died because of her impartiality."
Al-Arabiya spokesman Jihad Ballout said Bahjat, 26, had joined the channel
this year after working for rival Al Jazeera, Reuters reported. She is survived
by her mother and sister.
In a statement, the channel said Bahjat was "known for her professional
integrity and objectivity."
"Atwar was also the embodiment of non-sectarian harmony -- her father
is a Sunni while her mother is a Shia Muslim."
The other two dead were Khaled Mahmoud al-Falahi, 39, and Adnan Khairallah,
36, according to the channel. They were employed by Wasan Media in Iraq and
were working for Al-Arabiya at the time.
In its statement, the channel called for authorities to pursue measures to
"enhance the safety of journalists active in Iraq" and bring the killers
to justice.
"Once again, Al-Arabiya News Channel pays the ultimate price for persistently
pursuing the truth," the statement said.
"Until this new tragedy, Al-Arabiya lost a total of eight colleagues in
Iraq, five of whom died in a car bomb that targeted Al-Arabiya's bureau in Baghdad,
while three lost their lives as a result of U.S. fire.
"Also, Jawad Khathem, Al-Arabiya's reporter in Iraq, was the target of
an armed kidnap attempt that resulted in him being paralyzed from the waist
down."
More than 60 journalists have been killed in Iraq since the start of
the war in 2003, AP reported
By The Associated Press and CNN