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New
York, October 31, 2000 --- A CNN reporter was wounded by gunfire
while covering clashes between Israeli forces and Palestinians in
the Gaza Strip today.
Ben Wedeman, CNN's Cairo bureau chief, was hit in the back by a live
round at the Karni border crossing between Gaza and Israel. He is
in stable condition at Gaza's Shifa hospital.
Speaking from his hospital bed, 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 Palestinian protesters.
"The protestors were on one side of the street
and a handful of journalists on the other side," Wedeman said. He
described the situation as tense but relatively stable at first, with
sporadic gunfire. Journalists at the scene were wearing flak jackets
and helmets.
As Wedeman and CNN cameraman Muhamad Assad walked down the road to
an olive grove, a burst of fire 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.
Wedeman was hit about five minutes later, during a lull in the firing.
He was taking down his tripod and preparing to leave the area when
he was struck in the back. The bullet passed through Wedeman's flack
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 (AFP) reported that journalists including the
CNN crew were fired on by Israeli forces. An official at CNN told
CPJ that there was "no reason to believe whoever fired upon Wedeman
knew he was a journalist."
In a separate incident at Karni crossing a few hours earlier, AFP
still photographer Fayez Nourredine and Reuters cameraman Shams Shana'
were covering clashes between stone-throwing Palestinians and Israeli
forces and were moving in the direction of the Israeli position when
a bullet passed by Noureddine's head. Both men subsequently retreated.
On October 19, CPJ released Bloodied
and Beleaguered, a multimedia report on threats against Palestinian
journalists in the occupied territories. The report describes how
in recent years, a number of Palestinian cameramen, news photographers,
and reporters working in the occupied territories have been seriously
wounded by Israeli gunfire.
END