On May 15, Bertrand
Aguirre, a correspondent for the French television channel TF1, was hit
in the chest by a bullet fired by an Israeli border policeman while he
was covering clashes between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli troops
near the West Bank city of Ramallah. The incident was recorded on videotape;
Aguirre might have been killed had he not been wearing a bulletproof vest.
A spokesman for the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) pledged a "very strenuous
and serious investigation." It was the fifteenth case documented by CPJ
of a journalist wounded by Israeli gunfire since the unrest began in the
Occupied Territories late last September. There are also several other
unconfirmed cases of shootings that CPJ has yet to fully investigate.
Such incidents represent the most dangerous and immediate threat to journalists
covering the unrest. CPJ has repeatedly communicated its deep concern
to Israeli authorities, but despite these requests, the IDF and the Israeli
government have in all but a handful of cases failed to report the outcome
of investigations into specific incidents or to adequately explain the
circumstances of the shootings.
"I don't remember the situation being as bad as this," Howard Goller,
chairman of the Foreign Press Association in Israel, told the Israeli
paper
Haaretz in May. Goller also criticized "the apparent failure
of the government and the IDF to send clear and constantly reiterated
directives to its troops in the field that reporters have an absolute
right, an obligation, to be present at confrontations and clashes and
are not merely ‘civilians'--as one officer suggested to the
New York
Times--caught unluckily in some dangerous place."
Many of the recent cases follow a long-standing pattern. Over the years,
CPJ has documented many cases in which journalists were wounded despite
stationing themselves a considerable distance from demonstrators and being
easily recognizable because of their camera equipment. In some cases,
including during the current unrest, the IDF fired only a few rounds,
hitting journalists in the legs or camera-holding hand with what seemed
like pinpoint accuracy.
CPJ is concerned that in at least some of these cases, IDF soldiers may
have targeted journalists deliberately (the IDF denies this). Based on
the available evidence, we are convinced that the IDF has at the very
least been guilty of gross recklessness. The Israeli authorities' failure
even to respond to many of the accusations, let alone investigate them
seriously, suggests official indifference that could lead field commanders
or individual soldiers to conclude that the IDF tolerates these abuses.
In its official response to this research document, Israel's embassy in
Washington wrote that Ambassador David Ivry "categorically rejects the
implication that Israel deliberately targets journalists. On the contrary,
the standing orders of the IDF explicitly prohibit such behavior. The
IDF unequivocally takes disciplinary action against any soldier found
in violation of this policy." The embassy statement went on to say that
"the Government of Israel is committed not only to a free press but also
to protecting the safety of journalists." Ambassador David Ivry has requested
the Foreign Ministry and IDF's "immediate attention to the specific incidents
in the CPJ report, as well as to the matter as a whole." The full text
of the embassy's statement is included in the
appendix
of this report.
Nearly all of the cases presented below have been published previously
by CPJ in its research reports or in open letters to Israeli officials.
Here, however, CPJ has added information on the status of the official
investigations into each case. We summarize select cases from past years
that highlight a long-term trend of similar shooting incidents. See especially
two previous reports:
Covering the Crisis and
Bloody
and Beleaguered (about the plight of Palestinian journalists).
CPJ reiterates its recommendation that the Israeli government adopt the
following measures in order to ensure the safety and freedom of journalists
covering events in Israel and the Occupied Territories:
- Conduct thorough and independent investigations into every incident
in which a journalist has been shot or wounded by Israeli forces.
The findings should be made public.
- Ensure that soldiers or others found to have acted recklessly or
criminally in injuring journalists are disciplined or prosecuted,
as the circumstances warrant.
- Request that the army and security forces review their operational
guidelines with special attention to protecting journalists from the
shooting incidents that have occurred for many years.
CPJ urges all parties to the conflict to respect the absolute right of
journalists to cover the news without interference of any kind. Journalists
have been attacked from all sides since the unrest began in the West Bank
and Gaza Strip nine months ago. They have been beaten by Israeli soldiers
and Jewish settlers. Their freedom of movement has been restricted and
in some cases Israeli forces have detained them. CPJ has also documented
numerous cases of harassment, threats, and censorship carried out against
journalists by Palestinian Authority officials and Palestinian civilians.
The shooting of journalists by the IDF, however, is the most dangerous
and immediate threat to media professionals covering the current unrest.
The large number who have been wounded—many under circumstances that clearly
distinguished them from the parties to the conflict—raises questions about
the IDF's willingness to ensure the safety of journalists.
Journalists
Injured/Threatened by Live Gunfire or Rubber-Coated Steel Bullets

June
26, 2001
Hazem Bader, Associated Press Television News
Bader, a free-lance cameraman working with the Associated Press Television
News (APTN) in the West Bank city of Hebron, came under heavy machine
gun fire while riding in his car.
At around dusk on June 26, Hazem Bader, a veteran Hebron-based cameraman
who strings for the APTN, was driving home from an assignment when his
car came under attack in the Palestinian-controlled Bab al-Zawiyah section
of the city. Bader said the fire came from an Israeli Defense Forces (IDF)
outpost near the Jewish settlement of Tel Rumeida, about 500 meters away.
The first burst hit a wall just a few meters from his car, causing him
to exit the vehicle and take cover. It was followed ten seconds later
by a second burst, Bader said, which struck a nearby streetlight. A few
minutes later, five or six machine gun rounds were fired directly at his
car—three of which struck the vehicle.
Bader told CPJ that the street where the attack occurred was empty and
peaceful. "It was an open and clear area," Bader said. "No one was moving
in the area." He added that his car was plastered with Arabic, Hebrew,
and English stickers that clearly identified it as a press vehicle.
IDF spokesman Olivier Rafowicz said he had no information about the Hazem
Bader incident, but added that the IDF had received a letter of inquiry
from the AP and was "looking into it."
May 15, 2001
Bertrand Aguirre, TF1
Aguirre, a reporter for the French television channel TF1, was wounded
in the chest by a live Israeli round while covering clashes between Israeli
troops and Palestinian demonstrators near the West Bank city of Ramallah.
At the time of the incident, Aguirre had just finished a stand-up report.
An Israeli border policeman opened fire from about 200 meters (218 yards)
away with a single round that struck him in the chest. Aguirre's bulletproof
vest stopped the round and most likely saved his life.
Aguirre was standing about 50 to 100 meters (54 to 109 yards) behind stone
throwing Palestinian demonstrators who were between him and the border
policeman. The incident occurred during a lull in the clashes, according
to eyewitnesses. While it is uncertain whether the soldier was aiming
at Aguirre, video footage shows the soldier opening fire in the direction
of unarmed demonstrators and journalists. The footage shows that he was
not in a life-threatening situation and had violated the IDF's rules of
engagement.
"It's clear that the soldier opened fire with live ammunition on an unarmed
crowed and that he was shooting to kill. Was he aiming at me or not? I
can't tell that," Aguirre told CPJ. Aguirre said that he was easily recognized
as a reporter, holding a microphone and wearing conspicuous white flak
jacket as he stood alongside his camera crew.
Status of Investigation: IDF Spokesman Col. Olivier Rafowicz told
CPJ in a telephone interview that the authorities "are carrying out a
very strenuous and serious investigation into this incident." He said
that Israeli authorities had asked to examine Aguirre's flak jacket, which
was being shipped to France for tests. He said the IDF would seek to identify
the soldier suspected of firing the live round but disputed the allegation
that the soldier on the videotape was the culprit, saying his rifle was
apparently equipped to fire rubber bullets.
UPDATE: On June 21, Danny Seaman,
director of the Government Press Office's Foreign Press Department, told
CPJ that an internal police investigation into Aguirre’s shooting was
underway. Investigators had received video footage of the incident, Seaman
said, along with the bullet that wounded the journalist. The investigation
is taking place under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Justice. The
findings are expected to be released next week, said Seaman, and if any
evidence of wrongdoing is found then the Justice Ministry could initiate
a criminal prosecution.
April 20, 2001
Layla Odeh, Abu Dhabi TV
Layla Odeh, a correspondent for the United Arab Emirates-based Abu
Dhabi TV, was shot by Israeli troops while she and two colleagues were
on assignment in the town of Rafah in the Gaza Strip. At the time of the
shooting, the journalists told CPJ, they were interviewing and filming
local residents whose homes had been destroyed by Israeli forces. Suddenly,
two live shots were fired in their direction from a nearby IDF position.
When the crew attempted to flee the scene, a third shot was fired, striking
Odeh in the back of her thigh. She was taken to the Shifa hospital where
she underwent surgery to remove the bullet. At the time of the shooting,
there were no clashes taking place in their vicinity, according to Odeh
and her colleagues, who said they were clearly identifiable as journalists
due to their conspicuous camera equipment. Video footage appears to confirm
their account.
IDF spokesman Olivier Rafowicz expressed regret for the incident and said
that an IDF investigation was underway. He told CPJ that "there was no
intention to hit the journalists" and added that the Abu Dhabi crew had
been working in a dangerous "area of violence."
Status of Investigation: On April 25, CPJ protested the attack
in a letter to Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and urged him
to ensure
that Israeli authorities launched a thorough investigation into this incident,
as well as other similar cases involving journalists wounded by Israeli
gunfire. In a June 7 letter to CPJ executive director Ann Cooper, Prime
Minister Sharon's spokesman Raanan Gissin wrote that the Odeh incident
was "under official IDF investigation" and that "we cannot release any
of the findings yet." Gissin added that "the Prime Minister and the IDF
are serious about examining this matter thoroughly."
In its June 19 response to this research document, Israel's embassy in
Washington, DC wrote: "There was an investigation into this incident.
The investigation revealed that Ms. Odeh was hit by a rubber bullet fired
from a raised lookout position. The severity of her injuries was due to
the use of rubber bullets from this position. Because use of rubber bullets
in this situation were found to be dangerous, their use has been forbidden
in such cases."
(For the full embassy statement see the appendix
below)
March 8, 2001
Christine Hauser, Ahmed Bahadou, and Suhaib Salem, Reuters
An IDF soldier in an armored carrier opened fire in the direction
of three Reuters journalists at the Netzarim Junction in Gaza. According
to Reuters, reporter Christine Hauser, cameraman Ahmed Bahadou, and
free-lance photographer Suhaib Salem were about 50 meters (54 yards)
from the armored carrier when the soldier started firing a heavy machine
gun in their direction. The journalists quickly took cover.
Reuters reported that when the shooting occurred, Bahadou and Salem
were pointing their cameras in the opposite direction from the carrier,
and that Hauser had taken out her notebook. The journalists said they
made eye contact with the IDF gunner in order to assure him that they
were press. The Netzarim Junction was described as quiet at the time.
IDF spokesman Olivier Rafowicz later characterized the gunfire as "warning
shots," according to Reuters, claiming the journalists had put themselves
at risk by approaching the IDF outpost. Due to the "tense security situation
in Gaza," Rafowicz told Reuters, "civilians are not allowed to approach
Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) outposts because of a present threat of
terror activity." He added that the journalists failed to inform the
IDF ahead of time of their presence in the area. However, Reuters pointed
out that the IDF requires no such notification from journalists working
in that particular area.
Status of Investigation: In a March 13 letter to Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon, CPJ urged him to ensure that the IDF launch an
immediate and thorough investigation into the incident and make its
findings public. CPJ received no response from the Israeli government
or the IDF. In its June 19 response to this research document, however,
Israel's embassy in Washington, DC wrote that an "investigation
was launched the day of the incident. The investigation found that the
soldiers involved acted within IDF guidelines. An official statement
from the IDF Spokesman was issued."
February 9, 2001
Laurent van der Stock, Gamma photo agency and Newsweek
At about 3:15 p.m. on February 9, Van der Stock, 36, a veteran photographer
working for the Gamma photo agency and Newsweek magazine, was
struck in the left knee by a live bullet while covering clashes between
Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli troops near Ramallah. The bullet
entered above his knee and exited through the back of his leg, severing
an artery and causing nerve damage.
At the time of the attack, Van der Stock and several other photojournalists
had been covering clashes near the City Inn Hotel, along Ramallah's
border with its sister city of Al-Bireh, for about two hours. An Israeli
army position composed of soldiers in jeeps was located near the hotel.
According to journalists at the scene, armed Israeli troops were also
stationed in buildings situated on the high ground behind the jeeps,
some 500 meters (546 yards) from the journalists. The Israeli jeeps
were estimated to be about 100 meters (109 yards) away.
According to the journalists, Palestinian demonstrators had launched
several attacks on the Israeli jeeps, using stones, pipes, and slingshots.
The soldiers frequently responded by exiting their jeeps and opening
fire with rubber bullets, tear gas, or stun grenades. Palestinian gunmen
in buildings along the main road also fired sporadically on the Israeli
positions in the course of the afternoon.
At about 3:15 p.m., Van der Stock ventured into the middle of the road
during clashes in order to photograph Palestinian youths retreating
from an IDF counterattack. "I understood the demonstrators would run
back, so I ran [out] about 20 seconds ahead of time and photographed
people running [retreating] toward me," Van der Stock told CPJ. "I was
shot in the [left] knee."
Van der Stock described the situation just prior to the incident as
chaotic, but added that anyone firing live ammunition into the crowd
should have known that he was a photographer, since he carried two cameras
around his neck.
In a telephone interview, IDF spokesman Olivier Rafowicz told CPJ that
IDF troops and Palestinian gunmen were engaged in a fierce gun battle
at the time Van der Stock was shot. Because of the general confusion
and because the bullet that entered the photographer's leg was never
retrieved, the army was unable to determine who fired the shot, Rafowicz
claimed.
Nonetheless, Van der Stock and eyewitnesses interviewed by CPJ maintained
that the shot was likely fired by an Israeli soldier stationed either
on the ground or in a nearby building. "The way the bullet came and
hit him straight in the knee, there was no doubt it came from straight
ahead [i.e. the Israeli positions]," one photographer at the scene told
CPJ. "The Palestinian gunmen who were firing earlier were in the buildings...100
meters [109 yards] to the left and right but behind Laurent. His back
would have been to the Palestinian gunmen...From what I saw...it would
have to be a ballistic miracle for him to have been hit by Palestinian
fire." Moreover, journalists on the scene added that gunfire from the
Palestinian side had ceased for some time before Van der Stock was shot.
Status of Investigation: On March 13, CPJ wrote the IDF
spokesman's office to urge the IDF to launch a serious and thorough
investigation to determine if one of its soldiers in fact fired the
round that injured Laurent Van der Stock, and for what reason. CPJ also
requested that the IDF release the findings of this investigation, along
with any additional information that might shed light on this disturbing
incident. The IDF responded that it was looking into the incident and
promised to reply in detail to CPJ's concerns. CPJ has yet to receive
a detailed reply from the IDF.
November 11, 2000
Yola Monakhov, The Associated Press
Monakhov, a 26-year-old free-lance photographer working with The Associated
Press, was struck in the lower abdomen by a live round fired by an Israeli
soldier in the West Bank town of Bethlehem. She sustained serious injuries
to her bladder and other internal organs. Her pelvis was also fractured
in several places.
According to the AP, Monakhov had been with a small group of Palestinian
youths near Rachel's Tomb, the site of many Israeli-Palestinian clashes.
The youths were breaking up stones to use in their slingshots. Some
were hurling stones toward an Israeli outpost, the AP reported. Suddenly,
an Israeli solider appeared from around a corner and took aim at the
group from an estimated distance of 50 meters (54 feet). Monakhov fled
along with the youths, who took shelter in a small recess behind a closed
gate
.
"There was maybe one youth pressed in the doorway with me," she told
the AP, explaining that her bulky backpack prevented her from entering
the narrow space behind the gate. "I was waiting for the shot. And a
second later I collapsed."
The Israeli army initially denied that a journalist had been shot that
day, but on November 17, an army spokesman acknowledged that Israeli
troops had shot Monakhov, according to the AP. The army said it was
investigating the incident.
Status of Investigation: In early December, after intense media
criticism, the IDF formally apologized to Monakhov, stating that the
soldier who fired the shot had violated IDF rules of engagement but
had not intentionally targeted the journalist. The IDF statement added
that both the soldier and his commanding officer would face a court
martial. (See Israeli embassy statement below.) However, in early
2001, CPJ received unconfirmed reports that one of the soldiers involved
in the shooting incident had been spotted on active duty in the West
Bank. On March 11, CPJ wrote to the IDF spokesman requesting the names
of the two officers and detailed information about the types of punishment
and/or disciplinary action taken against them. While the IDF has acknowledged
receipt of CPJ's letter, it has yet to respond to our concerns.
October 31, 2000
Ben Wedeman, CNN
Wedeman, CNN's Cairo bureau chief, was hit in the back (near his waist)
by a live round at the Karni border crossing between Gaza and Israel.
Wedeman told CPJ that he had gone to Karni crossing following reports
of clashes there earlier in the day. He and his crew initially stationed
themselves across the street from a group of Palestinians whom he presumed
had been among the protestors earlier.
"[They] were on one side of the street and a handful of journalists
[were] on the other side," Wedeman said. He described the situation
as tense but relatively stable at first, although there was sporadic
gunfire. Journalists at the scene were wearing flak jackets and helmets.
As Wedeman and CNN cameraman Muhammad Assad walked down the road toward
an olive grove, a burst of gunfire erupted.
"Within minutes there was shooting. Intense shooting," he said. "I heard
bullets over my head. We realized we were not in a good position." He
added that what appeared to be a shell landed 15 to 20 meters (16-22
yards) away. About five minutes later, while Wedeman was taking down
his tripod and preparing to leave the area during a lull in the firing,
he was struck in the back. The bullet passed through Wedeman's flak
jacket.
He could not determine the source of the shot, but did say that his
back was to the Israeli position, between 400 meters (437 yards) and
one kilometer (0.62 miles) away. Agence France-Presse reported that
Israeli forces had fired on the CNN crew and other journalists in the
area. A CNN official told CPJ that there was "no reason to believe whoever
fired upon Wedeman knew he was a journalist."
Status of Investigation: The case of Ben Wedeman was one of 17 documented
cases of journalists wounded by IDF gunfire or harassed by Israeli forces
published by CPJ in its November 9, 2000 report, "Peril in the Palestinian
Territories." In the report, CPJ called on Israeli authorities to "release
any new information that might emerge in the course of these investigations
[into attacks against journalists], and to ensure that anyone found
guilty of wrongdoing is quickly brought to justice." In its November
15 response to CPJ's report, the IDF criticized CPJ's findings but has
failed to provide specific details about Wedeman's case and the 16 other
cases highlighted in the report.
However, on December 4, the Israeli daily Haaretz reported that
the battalion commander in charge of the investigation into the Wedeman
incident determined that it was "unreasonable" to say that his soldiers
had opened fire on an American reporter. "I saw the reporters taking
cover," the paper quoted the commander as saying, "and that is why I
limited the area of the soldiers' action so that the reporters would
not get hurt." According to Haaretz: "Aerial photographs of the
incident showed that the CNN team had been located separately from the
other reporters, whom the battalion commander had seen and whom he had
cautioned his soldiers not to harm. He could not have seen the CNN team.
His soldiers, it later clearly emerged, had in fact been responsible
for the shooting."
October 21, 2000
Bruno Stephens, Liberation, Stern
Stephens, a free-lance photographer working with the French newspaper
Liberation and the German magazine Stern, was grazed in
the throat by a live bullet while covering clashes between Israelis
and Palestinians in Ramallah. Stephens was standing with several other
journalists, well away from Palestinian demonstrators. He said the bullet,
which he believed was fired by Israeli troops, passed over the head
of a British free-lance photographer and then ricocheted off a wall
before grazing his throat. He suffered a minor burn. The incident took
place just minutes after the shooting of Paris-Match's Jacques-Marie
Bourget (see below), who was part of the same group of journalists.
Status of Investigation: The case of Bruno Stephens was published
by CPJ on November 9, 2000 in its report "Peril in the Palestinian Territories."
In the report, CPJ called on Israeli authorities to "release any new
information that might emerge in the course of these investigations,
and to ensure that anyone found guilty of wrongdoing is quickly brought
to justice." In its November 15 response to CPJ's report, the IDF criticized
CPJ's findings but has failed to provide specific details about Stephen's
case and the other cases highlighted in the report.
October 21, 2000
Jacques-Marie Bourget, Paris-Match
Bourget, a reporter for the French magazine Paris-Match, was
seriously injured when he was struck in the chest by a live bullet while
covering clashes between stone-throwing Palestinians and Israeli troops
in Ramallah. He was hospitalized in Ramallah and then flown to Paris
for treatment 24 hours later.
At the time of the incident, Bourget was standing along a wall with
a group of journalists and other bystanders. They were near, but not
among, a group of demonstrators, Paris- Match reported and other
eyewitnesses confirmed. A bullet then struck Bourget in the chest, entering
his lung. It was unclear exactly who fired the round, but Bourget's
colleagues accused Israeli forces.
"Of course it was fired by an Israeli. Everybody knows it," Paris-Match
photographer Thierry Esch told Agence France-Presse. Esch was standing
next to Bourget when he was hit.
A Paris-Match editor in Paris told CPJ that the magazine was
not sure who fired the round that hit Bourget, and that the magazine
did not believe he was targeted intentionally. However, another Paris-Match
journalist had a different view.
"From where he was standing, only those in front of him could have hit
him. And those in front of him were Israeli soldiers," Paris-Match
deputy editor Patrick Jarnoux told The Toronto Star. "He was
nowhere near the clashes, standing alone with a photographer," Jarnoux
added. "And a 57-year-old man can't easily be mistaken for a 15-year-old
rock thrower."
Status of Investigation: Bourget's case was highlighted in
CPJ's November 9, 2000 report, but the Israeli authorities have not
directly responded to CPJ about this case. However, Haaretz (December
4, 2000) reported that an "investigation was conducted in the Benjamin
brigade command, and the brigade commander, Colonel Gal Hirsch, held
a long talk with Esch, the photographer standing next to Bourget when
he was hit." The Haaretz article also quoted then-IDF spokesman
Major Yarden Vatikai saying that "it is indeed quite possible that the
journalist was hit by our fire." But Vatikai added, that it was determined
that shots were not fired intentionally. "The journalist stood in the
vicinity of serious clashes and the soldiers, who were about 70 meters
away, could not have spotted him," Vatikai said, according to Haaretz.
October 18, 2000
Patrick Baz, Agence France-Presse
An Israeli soldier shot Baz in the finger with a rubber-coated metal
bullet while the photographer was covering clashes between Israeli forces
and stone-throwing Palestinian protesters in Ramallah. Baz was standing
with another photographer at the time. "It was obvious [we were journalists].
We were wearing white helmets and flak jackets," Baz told CPJ. "I got
it on my finger while [the finger] was on my camera...I can't say it
was a stray bullet."
"I would not complain if I was in the middle of the demonstration ...[but]
we were on the side between demonstrators and soldiers and in an empty
field really," he continued. "You could call it a no-mans land." Although
Palestinian militiamen or police at the scene later engaged in gunfire
with the Israeli forces, Baz said this happened later on in the clashes,
after he was hit.
Status of Investigation: Baz's case was highlighted in CPJ's
November 9, 2000 report. CPJ has received no information from the IDF
or the Israeli government about the status of any investigation launched
into this incident.
October 17, 2000
Mahfouz Abu Turk, Reuters
Abu Turk, a photographer working with Reuters, was wounded in the hand
by a rubber-coated metal bullet fired by Israeli troops. He had been
covering clashes between Palestinians and Israeli forces that erupted
in Bethlehem after the funeral of a Palestinian boy.
Just before the attack, Abu Turk was filming the clashes from behind
a cement block. He was taken to hospital in Beit Jala where he received
four stitches for the wound.
Abu Turk claimed that the camera he was holding clearly identified him
as a journalist.
Status of Investigation: Abu Turk's case was highlighted in CPJ's
November 9, 2000 report. The organization has received no information
from the IDF or Israeli government about the status of any investigation
into this incident.
October 9, 2000
Luc Delahaye, Magnum, Newsweek
A rubber-coated metal bullet fired by Israeli forces hit the camera
lens of Delahaye, a free-lance photographer with the Magnum photo agency
and Newsweek magazine. At the time of the incident, he was filming
clashes between Israeli forces and Palestinian demonstrators in Ramallah.
Delahaye estimated that he was shot at a range of 40 meters (44 yards).
His camera was destroyed.
While working at the same location the next day, his head was grazed
by another rubber bullet. One week later, he was hit on the forehead
by a third rubber bullet while photographing a Palestinian protester
who had just been hit in the head by a live round.
"In the three incidents I was definitely targeted by the soldiers, but
I cannot say if I was targeted as a human being or as a journalist,"
Delahaye told CPJ, adding that he was wearing only a T-shirt and not
a flak jacket. "It is impossible to say."
Status of Investigation: Delahaye's case was highlighted in CPJ's
November 9, 2000 report. CPJ has received no information from the IDF
or the Israeli government about the status of any investigation into
this incident.
October 2, 2000
Loay Abu Haykal, Reuters
Abu Haykel, a Reuters photojournalist, was hit in the leg by a rubber
bullet while covering clashes between Palestinians and Israelis in the
West Bank city of Hebron. His injury was described as not serious.
Status of Investigation: Abu Haykal's case was highlighted in CPJ's
November 9, 2000 report. The organization has received no information
from the IDF or the Israeli government about the status of any investigation
into this incident.
October 2, 2000
Mazen Dana, Reuters
Dana, a Hebron-based cameraman who was covering clashes on Hebron's
Shalalah Street for Reuters, was hit in the left foot and leg by live
rounds fired by Israeli forces. A day earlier, Dana had been wounded
in the same leg by a rubber bullet.
Status of Investigation: Dana's case was highlighted in CPJ's November
9, 2000 report. We have received no information from the IDF or Israeli
government about the status of any investigation into this incident.
September 29, 2000
Mahfouz Abu Turk, Reuters
Abu Turk was hit in the left thigh with a rubber-coated metal bullet
fired by Israeli troops. He had been covering the clashes at Jerusalem's
Al-Aqsa mosque and was taking cover behind a large stone column. Wounded,
he fled the scene but still kept filming while heading in the direction
of the mosque. Shortly thereafter, he was hit in the right foot by another
rubber bullet. He was taken to Al-Makased Hospital for treatment and
released the same day.
Status of Investigation: Abu Turk's case was highlighted in CPJ's
November 9, 2000 report. The organization has received no information
from the IDF or Israeli government about the status of any investigation
into this incident.
September 29, 2000
Khaled Zeghari, Reuters
Israeli soldiers beat Zeghari, a cameraman stringing for Reuters, and
shot him in the leg with a rubber-coated metal bullet while the journalist
was covering clashes at the Al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem. The attack
took place about five minutes after Hazem Bader, a cameraman for the
Associated Press, was shot (see below).
"I was filming the crowd during Friday prayers and when the clashes
took place by the Magharbeh Gate I took refuge behind a large rock [stone
column] in the courtyard of the Islamic Museum," Zeghari said. "I witnessed
how the wounded youth were falling on the ground as the shooting intensified."
He said that after ten minutes or so, a group of Israeli soldiers stormed
the courtyard and opened fire.
"At that time I was filming the event while lying down on the ground.
All of a sudden the soldiers approached me and began beating me with
bats and sticks on my head and shoulders," Zeghari said. "Trying to
protect my head against their fierce beating I ran toward Magharbeh
Gate and from there I was [taken], bleeding from my head and right leg,
to Hadassah Hospital in Ein Karem for treatment."
Zeghari did not realize until doctors examined him at the hospital that
he had been hit in the leg by a rubber-coated metal bullet. The bullet,
which left a gash measuring 2 cm by 2cm by 4cm (.8 by .8 by 1.6 inches)
and lodged in Zeghari's leg, was apparently fired at close range. Zeghari
said the shooting might have occurred in the initial moments of the
soldiers' attack.
In addition to the bullet wound, Zeghari suffered a cut and several
bruises on his head as well as bruises on his back, right shoulder and
left hand. He lost his camera during the melee.
Status of Investigation: Zeghari's case was highlighted in CPJ's
November 9, 2000 report. CPJ has received no information from the IDF
or Israeli government about the status of any investigation into this
incident.
September 29, 2000
Hazem Bader, The Associated Press
Bader, a cameraman stringing for The Associated Press, was wounded in
his right hand by a rubber-coated metal bullet while covering clashes
between Israeli troops and Palestinian demonstrators at Jerusalem's
Al-Aqsa mosque. The bullet was fired by an Israeli soldier from an estimated
range of 15 meters (16 yards), according to Bader and another eyewitness.
Bader said he and a small group of photographers and cameramen had been
filming soldiers shooting at demonstrators near Magharbeh Gate (overlooking
the Western Wall). The journalists were stationed behind a stone column
about 15 meters (16 yards) away from the soldiers. Bader claimed he
was hit on purpose. "It was a clear shot at us," he said. "We were far
from the demonstrators."
The bullet broke three bones in Bader's hand. The journalist has since
had two metal plates inserted. He told CPJ that he still has no movement
in two of his fingers and has been unable to work since the attack.
Status of Investigation: Bader's case was highlighted in CPJ's November
9, 2000 report. The organization has received no information from the
IDF or Israeli government about the status of any investigation into
this incident.
APPENDIX
Over the last decade, CPJ has documented numerous other cases of journalists
who have been injured by IDF gunfire in circumstances that suggest they
may have been intentionally targeted or were the victims of IDF recklessness.
Eight examples are listed below in order to show that the current spate
of journalists wounded by IDF gunfire conforms to a long-standing pattern
of similar incidents over the years.
Selected Cases Documented by CPJ 1993-2000:
May 15, 2000
Mazen Dana, Reuters
Dana, a cameraman working with Reuters, was wounded in his right
leg by an Israeli soldier firing rubber-coated metal bullets on Shuhada
Street in Hebron. He and two other colleagues had been filming clashes
between Palestinian youths and Israeli soldiers. When Dana was hit,
he and his colleagues took cover behind a metal shop door. Soldiers
continued firing shots hitting the door. The journalists say that they
were well away from stone throwing protestors at the time of the shooting
and that they were clearly identifiable as cameramen by their equipment.
December 19, 1998
Naji Dana, TF1
Dana, a cameraman for the French channel TF1, was wounded in both
legs by rubber-coated metal bullets while covering pro-Iraq demonstrations
by stone throwing Palestinian youths in Hebron. Dozens were wounded
in the clashes. "I was far away from the [demonstrating] youths," said
Dana, who was hit while carrying his bulky video camera. "There were
two bullets fired. It's hard to say this was accidental." Dana said
he was about 100 meters (109 yards) from protestors and shot at a distance
of 200-300 meters (218 to 328 yards).
October 8, 1998
Hossam Abu Alan, Agence France-Presse
Abu Alan, a photographer for Agence France-Presse, was critically
wounded in the back of the head by a rubber-coated metal while filming
a wounded youth at the entrance to Hebron's Shuhada Street. At the time
of the shooting, Abu Alan had stepped from his position along the sidewalk
into the street where clashes were taking place. He had gone to photograph
a teenager who lay wounded by a rubber bullet. Abu Alan said he had
taken advantage of a lull in the violence, a time, journalists say,
when demonstrators and the army commonly halt hostilities so that the
wounded can be tended to.
"I went to take the photo, but couldn't. And that's all I remember,"
said Abu Alan. A rubber bullet pierced Abu Alan's skull at the back
of his head, leaving a 2.5 cm (.9 inches) hole. As the photographer
collapsed forward, his head crashed into his camera leaving a large
gash that required 17 stitches.
Witnesses described Abu Alan as being about 30-40 meters (32 to 43 yards)
away from the soldier believed to have shot him. The shooter in question
was apparently sitting in a chair with a newspaper in front of him as
he fired rounds into the crowd.
Before the shooting, Abu Alan and Mazen Dana were stationed close to
Israeli troops who were confronting the stone-throwers, but decided
to move closer opposite the youths to film from a different vantage
point. "We moved to the other side. At the time, three people had been
wounded [by Israeli fire]," recalled Dana. "The youths came in to tend
to the wounded. There was no shooting or stone throwing."
March 15, 1998
Avichai Nudel, Maariv
Nudel, a photographer for the Israeli daily Maariv, was
wounded in the stomach by a rubber bullet fired by Israeli Defense Forces
(IDF) soldiers while he was covering clashes between Israelis and Palestinians
in the West Bank city of Hebron.
Nudel was far from the disturbances, with other journalists, when he
was shot. He was sent to the hospital for treatment and is recovering
from his injuries.
"I wasn't in the middle of the clashes," Nudel later told CPJ. He and
other journalists "were standing behind some cars and not in the line
of fire." The bullet, one of only six that Israeli troops fired that
day, passed through his stomach, causing serious injuries for which
he was expected to undergo a second operation last year.
"Avichai was shot from a 40-meter (43 yards) range," wrote Maariv
editor Yaacov Erez. "It was not accidentally discharged or a stray
bullet. It's possible that the soldier who shot him had intended to
shoot at the journalists who were covering the unrest, or that he acted
in haste and was criminally negligent."
March 13, 1998
Nael Shiyoukhi, Reuters
Mazen Dana, Reuters
Majdi al-Tamimi, ABC
Amer Jabari, ABC
Hazem Bader, Associated Press
Imad al-Said, Associated Press
Wael Shiyoukhi, Amal TV
Ayman al-Kurd, Amal TV
Bilal al-Joneidi, Reuters
Israeli soldiers in Hebron opened fire with rubber-coated metal bullets
on a group of reporters covering clashes between Palestinian protestors
and Israeli troops. Those wounded included: Nael Shiyoukhi, Mazen Dana,
and Bilal al-Joneidi of Reuters; Majdi al-Tamimi and Amer Jabari of
ABC News; Hazem Bader and Imad al-Said of the Associated Press; and
Wael Shiyoukhi and Ayman al-Kurd of Amal TV.
Witnesses characterized the incident as the IDF's intentional targeting
of the journalists, who were in the vicinity of the clashes. Three of
the wounded journalists told CPJ that they were at least 100 to 200
meters from Palestinian protestors when they were fired upon. These
journalists also maintain that soldiers continued shooting at them despite
their attempts to identify themselves as members of the press and entreaties
to the soldiers to halt their fire.
The incident took place after several journalists were covering clashes
between Palestinians and Jewish settlers on Al-Karantina Street, near
the Jewish settlement of Avraham Avinu, which began when a large group
of demonstrating settlers stormed into the Palestinian-controlled sector
of the city. About an hour after the riot started, the IDF restored
order and pushed the settlers back into their own enclaves. Shiyoukhi
and the other journalists, meanwhile, were packing up to go home. "Everything
was quiet," Shiyoukhi recalled. "We were about to leave. I took my mobile
phone out and called the office to figure out how to get them my footage.
Then I saw Israeli border police coming towards me, so I started filming
them."
"Suddenly, they took positions on one knee and started firing at me
from not more than 20 meters away," Shiyoukhi continued. The closest
Palestinian demonstrators were about 100 meters away on top of a hill,
where they were burning tires and throwing stones. Shiyoukhi and the
others initially thought the soldiers were heading for the protesters.
"There were three soldiers at first," he said. "We shouted that we were
journalists. They could hear us clearly. I shouted in Hebrew, Arabic,
and English." A rubber-coated metal bullet then struck Shiyoukhi on
the forehead and knocked him to the ground. Blood streaming down his
face, he struggled to get to his feet while his colleagues took cover
behind a garbage dumpster about one meter away from him. They shouted
at the soldiers to hold fire, repeatedly identifying themselves as journalists.
At one point, Mazen Dana tried to go to Shiyoukhi's aid, but was forced
to retreat when he took a rubber bullet in the shoulder.
As Shiyoukhi lay on the ground, writhing in pain and covered in blood,
he was struck by two additional rounds, one in the chest and another
in the back. His colleagues could not come to his aid for fear of gunfire.
Eventually, Shiyoukhi was dragged to safety, by Hazem Bader of The Associated
Press, and bundled into a car that friends had driven to the scene and
positioned in front of the dumpster to block the Israeli fire. In all,
some eight journalists were wounded in the encounter. The shocking,
two-minute ordeal was captured on film by some of Shiyoukhi's colleagues
and then broadcast across the world, triggering a firestorm of criticism
against the IDF.
The IDF's initial response was that all eight journalists had been hit
by stray ricochets. The IDF also claimed that it was too dark for the
soldiers to identify Shiyoukhi and his colleagues as journalists, and
that a Palestinian demonstrator had run into the crowd of reporters.
The IDF later claimed, variously, that the journalists were mingling
with the rioters and that Shiyoukhi had been hit by a Palestinian-thrown
rock. But video footage of the incident indicates that Shiyoukhi was
clearly illuminated by camera lights and streetlights. The demonstrators
were over a hundred meters away. Moreover, the journalists repeatedly
identified themselves as press.
July 13, 1997
Imad al-Said, Associated Press Television
Mazen Dana, Reuters
Amer Jaabari, ABC
Diya Juabi, Abu Dhabi Television
Israel Defense Forces soldiers shot rubber bullets at Al-Said, Dana,
Jabari, and Juabi—respectively, cameramen for APTV, Reuters, ABC, and
Abu Dhabi TV. The journalists were covering a demonstration in which
Palestinians were burning an Israeli flag. Eyewitnesses said the soldiers
intentionally fired on the journalists, most of whom were at a considerable
distance from the demonstrators and carried conspicuous camera equipment
that clearly identified them as media. "The youths started burning the
flag and instead of shooting at them they shot at us," Dana, who was
wounded in the shoulder, later told CPJ. "Then my colleagues came to
help me and then they shot Amer [ABC News cameraman Amer Jabari]. And
when Imad [AP TV cameraman Imad al-Said] came to help they shot him
and then another journalist."
In a strongly worded letter of protest to IDF Spokesman Oded Ben Ami,
the Foreign Press Association in Israel wrote that "the journalists
were covering a flag-burning protest in the city, and television footage
indicates that they were well to the side and separated from the demonstrators."
The letter concluded, "It would seem that they were intentionally targeted."
CPJ on July 23 wrote to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, urging
an immediate investigation. The next day, the IDF said a special investigation
would be conducted, but to CPJ's knowledge no details were ever released.
July 16, 1993
Taher Shriteh, Reuters, New York Times
Shriteh was filming an army patrol driving through Shati refugee
camp when an Israeli army officer fired at him. The last vehicle in
the patrol stopped and an officer got out and aimed an M-16 rifle at
Shriteh's head. Shriteh immediately dropped his video camera. As the
officer continued to aim at him, Shriteh jumped behind a wall. The officer
fired at his head and missed. Shiteh reported that the officer then
let out a loud laugh, got back into his vehicle and drove off.
June 1, 1992
Taher Shriteh, Reuters, New York Times
Shriteh was filming violent clashes between soldiers and demonstrators
in Gaza City's Sheikh Radwan neighborhood when soldiers began firing
at him. He mounted his video camera on a tripod and set it to record
automatically. An Army sniper then fired at the camera and destroyed
it.