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and Beleaguered."
New
York, November 9, 2000 --- The Committee to Protect Journalists
(CPJ) has documented more than two dozen cases of journalists injured
or harassed while covering political violence in the West Bank and
the Gaza Strip since late September.
Thirteen of these cases involve journalists wounded by gunfire while
covering clashes between Palestinians and Israeli troops. Ten of these
shootings have been determined to be the result of gunfire from Israeli
forces. In the remaining three cases, the source of gunfire is unclear,
though reporters on the scene blamed Israeli soldiers.
CPJ is particularly disturbed by seven cases in which journalists
either charged that they were intentionally targeted by Israeli forces
or where the circumstances of the shootings raise concerns that the
Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) were at least guilty of extreme negligence.
CPJ's concerns about the safety of journalists
have been heightened by accounts of other observers that allege excessive
or indiscriminate use of gunfire by Israeli troops against Palestinian
demonstrators. In a recent report, the U.S.-based based Physicians
for Human Rights concluded that the IDF had used "live ammunition
and rubber bullets excessively and inappropriately to control demonstrators"
and that based on the high number of documented injuries to the head
and thighs, Israeli soldiers "appear to be shooting to inflict harm,
rather than solely in self-defense."
No conclusive evidence exists that the IDF has intentionally shot
at journalists and it has rejected claims to this effect. The IDF
has also stated that it is conducting investigations into a number
of shootings. CPJ urges 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 addition to journalists wounded by gunfire, CPJ has documented
three cases in which working journalists were severely beaten by Israeli
troops or undercover agents. Two journalists were arrested or summoned
by Israeli authorities for questioning in response to their coverage
of recent events.
CPJ has received several other unconfirmed reports of attacks on journalists
in the occupied territories that include physical assaults by soldiers
and Jewish settlers, as well as shootings.
In a recent development, the Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported
that the Israeli Defense Ministry issued an order to stop issuing
press credentials to Palestinians working with Western news organizations,
citing their alleged bias. While press cards are not a guarantee of
freedom of movement for Palestinian journalists, they often facilitate
movement through Israeli checkpoints. More importantly, Palestinian
journalists told CPJ, Israeli authorities have cancelled the travel
permits that they need to enter Israeli-controlled areas.
Journalists have also faced harassment from Palestinian demonstrators
and local authorities. At least three journalists were attacked by
a mob of Palestinians in Ramallah following the lynching of two Israeli
soldiers on October 12, according to CPJ research. The journalists
had their film or cameras confiscated and were harassed or beaten
by the mob. Several others were prevented from shooting the incident.
In a separate incident, Palestinian police detained the publisher
of a local newspaper in Hebron because of critical commentary against
the Palestinian National Authority (PNA).
One Palestinian journalist working for a Western news agency told
CPJ, on condition that his name not be used, that PNA security officials
had summoned him for questioning in response to his coverage.
CASES:
- Suleiman al-Shafei, Israel Channel 2 (October 31, 2000)
Israeli soldiers detained al-Shafei, a reporter and cameraman for
the Israeli television station Channel 2, when the journalist tried
to re-enter Israel from the Gaza Strip via the Erez checkpoint.
The soldiers told al-Shafei that he was violating an order prohibiting
Israeli citizens from entering the occupied territories.
After al-Shafei identified himself as a reporter for Channel 2 (and
an Israeli citizen), the soldiers called in Israeli police, who
took the journalist to a nearby police station and questioned him
for four hours. He was asked why he had gone to Gaza, whom he had
met with, and what he had seen. Al-Shafei refused to answer the
questions and protested his detention.
The police officers then tried to make al-Shafei sign a written
pledge that he would not enter Gaza for 90 days. He refused and
was eventually released on NIS 5,000 (US$1,250) bail, but the soldiers
confiscated his footage of the aftermath of Israel's bombing of
PNA offices in Gaza the night before.
In a virtually identical incident on November 2, Israeli soldiers
again stopped al-Shafei at the Erez checkpoint for violating the
ban on entry into the occupied territories, and transferred him
to police custody. After another interrogation, he was released
on bail of NIS15, 000 (US$3,750).
- Ben Wedeman, CNN (October 31,2000)
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. He is currently recovering from his injury. 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 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 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 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."
- Nasser Shiyoukhi, The Associated Press (October 23, 2000)
Israeli soldiers prevented Shiyoukhi, a reporter and photographer
for The Associated Press, from entering the West Bank village of
Sumoua, near Hebron. His Israeli government press card was also
confiscated.
At the time of the incident, Shiyoukhi was returning to Sumoua after
leaving in order to help a number of foreign reporters who were
having difficulty gaining access to the town. When he arrived at
the checkpoint, the soldiers told him he could not re-enter Sumoua,
and then took his press card.
- Bruno Stephens, Liberation, Stern (October
21)
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
Bourget, who was part of the same group of journalists.
- Jacques-Marie Bourget, Paris-Match (October 21,
2000)
Bourget, a reporter for the French magazine Paris-Match,
was struck in the chest by a live bullet and seriously injured 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."
An editor at Paris-Match said Bourget was recovering but that the
bullet was still lodged in his chest.
- Patrick Baz, Agence France-Presse (October 18, 2000)
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.
- Riccardo Cristiano, RAI (October 18, 2000)
Israel's Government Press Office (GPO) revoked the accreditation
of Cristiano, a journalist with the Italian state television network
RAI, after a Palestinian newspaper published a controversial open
letter in which he stated that RAI had not filmed the mob killing
of two Israeli soldiers in Ramallah on October 12. (The lynching
was captured on film by another Italian TV station.)
The letter was published in the Palestinian newspaper Al-Hayat
al-Jadida. Cristiano stated that RAI would not have filmed such
an incident, given the opportunity. He also pledged that both he
and RAI would abide by PNA regulations for the media. Many interpreted
this to mean that he would avoid negative news coverage of the PNA.
Shortly after Israeli authorities revoked Cristiano's accreditation,
RAI recalled the journalist to Rome and closed down its Jerusalem
bureau, citing security concerns.
- Mahfouz Abu Turk, Reuters (October 17, 2000)
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.
- Voice of Palestine (October 12, 2000)
At around 5 p.m., Israeli attack helicopters opened fire on two
transmission towers and other technical facilities used by the Voice
of Palestine in the West Bank city of Ramallah. The attack briefly
knocked the radio station off the air, but it quickly resumed broadcasting
on an FM frequency.
The Israeli army acknowledged that it deliberately targeted the
radio towers. A military spokesman justified the attack by charging
that the station had incited Palestinians to commit violence. Reuters
quoted Maj. Gen. Giora Eiland, head of the Israeli Army's Operation
Branch, as stating that Palestinian television broadcasts of Palestinians
dragging an effigy of an Israeli solider had incited a mob attack
in Ramallah, earlier that day, in which two Israeli soldiers were
killed. On October 18, CPJ wrote to Israeli prime minister Ehud
Barak, protesting the attack.
- Several cameraman and photojournalists (October 12, 2000)
A Palestinian mob prevented several cameramen and photojournalists
from filming the killing of two Israeli soldiers in Ramallah. Some
journalists were assaulted and had their film or cameras confiscated.
A cameraman from ABC News was kicked in the groin and stomach by
the crowd and prevented from shooting the event.
British free-lance photographer Mark Seager was also assaulted and
had his camera seized. "Instinctively, I reached for my camera,"
Seager later wrote in the London Sunday Telegraph. "I was
composing the picture when I was punched in the face by a Palestinian.
Another Palestinian pointed right at me shouting Ôno picture, no
picture!' while another guy hit me in the face and said Ôgive me
your film!' I tried to get the film out but they were all grabbing
me and one guy just pulled the camera off me and smashed it to the
floor."
Patrick Baz, a photographer for Agence France-Presse, had two of
his cameras confiscated by the crowd, though he had not taken any
photographs of the lynching. "I bumped into a crowd. They wanted
my film," he told CPJ, saying the mob apparently suspected him of
belonging to an undercover Israeli unit. "I hadn't taken any shots.
I had nothing to give them. I was pushed and harassed. They started
pulling at my camera." He said he ended up getting one of the cameras
back after imploring the crowd, but the other was destroyed.
One journalist working for a Western news organization who was at
the scene said the angry crowd prevented several photojournalists
who were on hand from filming the incident.
- Atta Oweisat, Zoom 77 (October 11, 2000)
Israeli police summoned Oweisat, a photographer for the Israeli
press agency Zoom 77, for questioning in Jerusalem. He initially
thought he had been called in about a complaint he filed about his
beating at the hands of an undercover Israeli security unit in Jerusalem
on October 4 (see case below). Instead, he was charged on several
counts, including insulting the police, injuring an officer, and
preventing the police from arresting demonstrators.
Oweisat vigorously denied the charges. "My presence as a photojournalist
has been a nuisance for [Israeli undercover agents] who infiltrate
among the local Palestinians during demonstrations and who are strongly
opposed to their identities being exposed," Oweisat alleged.
He was released on bail of NIS 5,000 (US$1250).
- Luc Delahaye, Magnum, Newsweek (October 9, 2000)
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. He had been filming clashes
between Israeli forces and Palestinian demonstrators in Ramallah.
Delahaye estimated that he was shot at a distance 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."
- Walid Suleiman Amayreh, Hebron Times (October 7,
2000)
Amayreh, publisher and editor of the biweekly Hebron Times,
was detained by Palestinian police following his live appearance
on the Gulf-based satellite news station Al-Shareqah. During
the program, Amayreh criticized the PNA for its rampant corruption
and its negotiations with Israel. He also called for the release
of imprisoned Hamas activists.
The arrest reportedly took place following a complaint from the
Palestinian Ministry of Information. Amayreh was questioned and
released after 30 hours in custody. He was forced to sign a pledge
affirming that he would abide by Palestinian information laws.
- Atta Oweisat, Zoom 77 (October 4, 2000)
Owiesat was assaulted by a group of undercover Israeli security
agents while covering the funeral of a Palestinian in Jabel Moukaber,
a neighborhood of Jerusalem.
He had been standing with a group of Israeli journalists when chaos
erupted after a number of undercover Israeli security agents arrived
suddenly and began arresting Palestinian youths.
"When I began to take pictures, seven of them [Israeli agents] attacked
me, threw me to the ground and started beating me and stepping on
me, trying hard to pull the cameras away from me," Oweisat recalled.
"I was holding the camera which was hanging from my neck tight.
Then a Border Patrol soldier came and held me by the neck and one
of the [agents] stepped on my stomach."
Oweisat was knocked unconscious and woke up in the hospital. His
bulletproof vest prevented serious injuries, he said.
A week earlier, Oweisat filmed a group of Israeli undercover agents
in Jerusalem's Shufat refugee camp. He believes this might have
motivated the attack.
- Loay Abu Haykel, Reuters (October 2, 2000)
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.
- Mazen Dana, Reuters (October 2, 2000)
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.
- Amer Jaabari, ABC News (October 1, 2000)
Jaabari, a Hebron-based cameraman for ABC News, was wounded in the
head by an unidentified projectile, thought to be either a rock
thrown by a Palestinian demonstrator or a rubber bullet. At the
time of the incident, he was covering clashes between Palestinian
demonstrators and Israeli troops in Hebron.
- Khaled Abu Aker, France 2, The New York Times (September
29, 2000)
Abu Aker, a correspondent with the French television station France
2 and the West Bank stringer for The New York Times, was
beaten by Israeli police at Jerusalem's Al-Aqsa mosque. The attack
occurred after Abu Aker refused to comply with a police officer
who demanded that the journalist hand over a rubber bullet that
he had picked up off the ground. Abu Aker was hit in the shoulder
with a truncheon and punched in the face. His shirt was ripped and
his eyeglasses stomped on in the ensuing melee, which another officer
joined.
- Mahfouz Abu Turk, Reuters (September 29, 2000)
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.
- Khaled Zeghari, Reuters (September 29, 2000)
Zeghari, a cameraman stringing for Reuters, was beaten by Israeli
soldiers and shot in the leg by a rubber-coated metal bullet while
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.
"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 after ten minutes or so, a group of Israeli soldiers stormed
the courtyard, opening 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.
- Hazem Bader, The Associated Press (September 29, 2000)
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.
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