Monday, 16 December 2013

Journalists hit by surge of attacks in Iraq’s Mosul (AFP)

MOSUL, Iraq: The north Iraq city of Mosul has become a nightmare
for journalists, with five killed since October with alleged impunity,
pushing some to flee the area or even the country.
Iraq has come in for repeated criticism over the lack of media
freedom and the number of unsolved killings of journalists.

But the series of attacks on journalists in Mosul, with the latest on
Sunday when gunmen shot dead TV presenter Nawras Al-Nuaimi, is
the worst to hit Iraq in years.
“I had to change my place of residence in Mosul and remain at my
(new) home without leaving, after the killings that affected a number
of my colleagues,” said journalist Salim Fadhel, 30.
“My colleagues left Mosul for the Kurdistan region with their
families, or for outside Iraq,” Fadhel said, referring to the
autonomous three-province region of north Iraq where attacks are
relatively rare compared to the rest of the country.
“There is a rumor in Mosul saying that armed groups issued a list of
names of 40 journalists who will be eliminated by them,” Fadhel
added.

Al-Nuaimi, a young presenter for Al-Mosuliyah TV, was the sixth
journalist to be killed in Iraq since October, of whom five died in
Mosul.

Her death came after that of Alaa Edwar, a Christian journalist
working for the Nineveh Al-Ghad television network, who was shot
dead in Mosul in November.

And Al-Mosuliyah cameraman Bashar Abdulqader Najm and two
journalists from Sharqiya television channel — correspondent
Mohammed Karim Al-Badrani and cameraman Mohammed Ghanem — were killed in Mosul in
October.

Mosul, the capital of Nineveh province, is one of the most dangerous cities in Iraq, with
militants frequently carrying out attacks and reportedly extorting money from shopkeepers.
And Iraq as a whole has come in for repeated criticism from media rights groups.
“Many Iraqi journalists are routinely exposed to threats, murder attempts, attacks, difficulties
obtaining permission, denial of access, confiscation of equipment and so on,” media rights
watchdog Reporters Without Borders (RSF) said earlier this year.
Another journalist, Kawa Ahmed Germyani, was shot dead earlier this month in front of his
mother in Iraq’s Kurdistan region.
Following that killing, RSF said it was “worried about the very dangerous climate for
journalists both in Iraqi Kurdistan and the rest of Iraq, and about the impunity enjoyed by
their attackers and killers.”

Ban Al-Obaidi, the Mosul representative of an Iraqi media rights group, said its efforts are
limited to issuing condemnations when attacks or other violations occur, “because of the lack
of interest of relevant government agencies.”
“Fifty journalists or media (employees) have been killed in the province of Nineveh at the
hands of unknown (people) since 2003,” and others have been wounded or disabled, she said.
“We are astonished by the weakness of the security forces and the local government, which
appear helpless in front of the killing and targeting of journalists that is happening without
them moving a finger to protect them,” said Fadhel.
Authorities should “at least arrest some of those who carry out killings, to find out who is
behind them,” he said.
Adhawi Al-Suaib, a member of the Nineveh provincial council’s culture committee, which is
responsible for handling issues related to journalists, admitted it is unable to protect them.
“We recognize our inability to do what is necessary to ensure journalists in Mosul are
protected,” Suaib told AFP.
“We are not even able to protect ourselves.”

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