Black Day for Journalism
| Wednesday April
9, 2003
Mohammed Alkhereiji, Arab News War
Correspondent AMMAN, 9 April 2003 — A Jordanian journalist was killed yesterday
when a US missile hit the offices of Al-Jazeera TV channel in downtown
Baghdad. Tareq Ayoub 35, who was working as a correspondent for the Al-Jazeera
network, died after suffering serious wounds. The Al-Jazeera TV
channel’s office was badly damaged by the missile, and another
cameraman was injured. Besides being a correspondent for the Al-Jazeera network in Amman,
Ayoub was also a writer for the English language Jordan Times daily. He
had arrived in Baghdad 10 days ago, after numerous earlier attempts
failed. Arab News spoke with members of his family who found out about his
death after Al-Jazeera showed two people being rushed out of the office,
carried on blankets. They later announced Ayoub’s death. His wife Dima told Arab News: “God is a witness to how I feel. My
husband was a wonderful father to a one-year-old daughter, and he wanted
to cover this war because he believed in showing the truth at all
costs.” Tareq’s sister in-law was more vocal and angry. “Where are our human rights, what did these people do to deserve
this?” she demanded. “That office was a work place for journalists.
Why were they targeted?” Mohammed Do’ma, a journalist in Jordan and a member of the
Jordanian Press Association who was a friend of Tareq’s, told Arab
News: “He was a kind-hearted, God-fearing gentleman. I’m still in
shock. It’s obvious that when the missile hit the office, that is when
we lost him.” Yesterday was a black day for press freedom. Apart from Ayoub’s
death, Taras Protsyuk, a Ukrainian cameraman with the Reuters news
agency, and Jose Couso, who worked for Telecinco Spanish television,
died after a US tank fired on the Palestine Hotel. Three other Reuters
staffers were injured. After the first incident, an Al-Jazeera presenter quickly accused US
forces on live television of “intentionally targeting” the
channel’s offices, recalling the US bombing of its Kabul bureau during
the 2001 war in Afghanistan. Al-Jazeera’s offices, on the road between the Mansur Hotel and the
Planning Ministry, are not far from the Republican Palace compound where
fierce fighting raged between US and Iraqi troops yesterday. Reuters Editor in Chief Geert Linnebank criticized US forces for
firing on the Palestine Hotel. “Taras’ death, and the injuries sustained by the others, were so
unnecessary,” Linnebank said from the agency’s headquarters. He called into question the “judgment of advancing US troops who
have known all along that this hotel is the main base for almost all
foreign journalists in Baghdad.” The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) condemned the hotel
attack as a possible war crime. “There is no doubt at all that these attacks could be targeting
journalists. If so, they are grave and serious violations of
international law,” said IFJ General Secretary Aidan White. “The bombing of a hotel where journalists are staying and targeting
of Arab media are particularly shocking events in a war which is being
fought in the name of democracy,” he said. “Those who are responsible must be brought to justice,” he said. The Brussels-based lobby group also accused the Iraqi regime of using
journalists and other civilians as “human shields,” and demanded
that both sides in the war be punished under international law. Abu Dhabi TV aired harrowing live footage yesterday showing its
camera position under attack. As they filmed the arrival of two US tanks on a major bridge in
central Baghdad close to their offices overlooking the river, what
appeared to be Iraqi machine-gun fire clattered out from just beneath
the camera position. Several incoming blasts boomed out, engulfing the
area in smoke. |
Copyright 2014 Q Madp www.OurWarHeroes.org