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New York, November 13, 2001The Committee to Protect Journalists
(CPJ) is deeply concerned about the destruction of the Kabul offices
of Al-Jazeera, the Qatari-based, Arabic language satellite television
station.
The building that housed the station was destroyed by a missile fired
by a U.S. warplane early Tuesday morning, according to international
news reports. No injuries have been reported.
The target of the missile attack remains unclear. The Kabul neighborhood
that houses the Al-Jazeera office was also home to several Taliban officials
and the Taliban Ministry for the Suppression of Vice and the Promotion
of Virtue.
A Pentagon spokesperson told CPJ that they were investigating reports
of the bombing.
"Al-Jazeera is a vital source of news and information
about the conflict in Afghanistan," said CPJ executive director Ann
Cooper. "We are relieved that no lives were lost in the incident and
we hope that Al-Jazeera will resume its Afghanistan coverage without
delay."
At 1:30 a.m. today Kabul time, a U.S. warplane flew over Kabul, and
reporters heard two loud explosions, Agence France-Presse reported.
A guard at the Al-Jazeera office told the Associated Press that a missile
landed on the office but did not explode.
The attacks came as Taliban soldiers retreated from Kabul while Northern
Alliance opposition forces took over control of the city.
BBC, AP offices damaged
CPJ is also investigating reports that offices of the BBC and The
Associated Press were damaged during recent bombings in Kabul. Windows
were shattered and equipment was destroyed at the BBC office in Kabul
during a bombing late yesterday afternoon Kabul time, but nobody was
injured, according to BBC sources in London.
Al-Jazeera reaches more than 35 million viewers, including 150,000 in
the United States. Although U.S. officials have frequently criticized
Al-Jazeera for its alleged anti-American bias, Secretary of State Colin
Powell and other senior officials have recently granted interviews to
the station, recognizing its important role in molding public opinion
across the Arab world.
For more information about Al-Jazeera, read CPJ's special report,
Between
Two Worlds.
CORRECTION: At the time this news release was issued, the Al-Jazeera
office was reported to have been hit by U.S. missiles. Spokespersons from the
U.S. Central Command have since clarified that U.S. aircraft dropped two
500-pound bombs on the building housing Al-Jazeera, based on indications
that it was a "known al Qaeda facility."
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