Two journalists killed in Baghdad, a third killed in Al-Khalis

Three more Iraqi journalists have been killed in the past two weeks, delayed reports have said. They bring the number of media workers killed in Iraq since the start of the year to 36, according to Reporters sans Frontières (RSF).

One of the many victims of a bombing in Al-Khalis (55 km north of Baghdad) on June 11 was Aref Ali Falih, 32, who had been the correspondent of the independent news agency Aswat Al-Irak (Voices of Iraq) in the northeastern province of Diyala since December. He is the third Aswat Al-Irak journalist to be killed since May 30.

An Iraqi journalist talks to her wounded colleague at a Baghdad hospital in April 2007. The media watchdog Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has revealed that four more Iraqi journalists have been killed in attacks across the country over the last three weeks.(AFP/File/Wisam Sami)

The offices of the public TV station Al-Iraqiya in the southern province of Maysan were destroyed in an arson attack on June 18 in which no one was hurt. Mohammed Al-Anwar, the correspondent of the Egyptian daily Al-Ahram, suffered an injury to his hand when a car bomb went off in the heart of Baghdad on June 19.

Poet and journalist Rahim Al-Maliki was killed in a suicide-bombing at the Mansour Hotel in Baghdad on June 25 while a meeting of tribal chiefs was taking place. Maliki, 39, who hosted two cultural programmes on Al-Iraqiya, had been covering the meeting. The two cameramen accompanying him were not hurt.

The Union of Journalists reported that veteran reporter Hamid Abd Sarhan, 57, was ambushed and killed as he drove home June 27 in the south Baghdad district of Al-Saydiya. Gunmen blocked his car’s passage and shot him several times, killing him instantly. Sarhan had worked for more than 30 years for the state-owned news agency until Saddam Hussein’s ouster. Since the US invasion, he had worked for the privately-owned news agency Iraqioun.

According to a police report, Zeena Shakir Mahmoud, 35, a journalist with the newspaper Al-Haqiqa, the mouthpiece of the Democratic Kurdish Party, was shot dead in Intisar, in the eastern part of the city of Mosul, on June 24. It has not yet been possible to confirm the report of her death with her newspaper.

RSF has also learnt that Imad Al-Khaza’i, correspondent of the privately-owned TV station Al-Baghdadiyah in Diwaniya (180 km south of Baghdad) was detained for several hours by Iraqi security forces for failing to respect a ban on approaching the scene of a bombing. The ban was decreed last month by Prime Minister Nouri Al-Maliki.

A total of 187 journalists and media assistants have been killed since the start of the US-led invasion in March 2003, according to RSF figures. Two are missing and there has been no news of 14 others since they were kidnapped.

“We extend our condolences to the families of the victims,” RSF said. “Iraqi journalists put their lives in danger each time they go to work. More and more Iraqi media are leaving the capital for safer locations in the Kurdish north or in neighbouring countries, but their local correspondents are left without any protection and their killers continue to operate with impunity.”

Date Posted: 28 June 2007 Last Modified: 28 June 2007