New York, April 14, 2003The Committee to Protect
Journalists (CPJ) mourns the death of Mario Podestá, a veteran
free-lance Argentine war correspondent on assignment for the Argentine
television station America TV, who was killed today in a car accident
on the highway between Amman, Jordan, and Baghdad.
Eduardo Cura, the station's news director, told CPJ that Podesta was part
of a convoy of journalists trying to get into Baghdad before nightfall.
Cura said that a tire explosion in the car where Podestá and camerawoman
Veronica Cabrera were traveling caused the accident, which occurred about
24 miles outside the Iraqi capital. Podestá died instantly, he
said, and his body was taken to the Palestine Hotel in Baghdad.
Cabrera, who was injured in the accident, was sent to a hospital near
Baghdad for treatment. CPJ is investigating reports that gunfire was heard
in the vicinity just before the accident happened.
Podesta, 52, an experienced independent war correspondent who was covering
his 35th conflict, had been in the Middle East since mid March. He is
the 12th journalist to die covering the war. A translator for the BBC
has also been killed.
Click
here to review "Media Casualties in Iraq."
Situation still dangerous for journalists
Since the fall of Baghdad more than a week ago, journalists covering
events inside Iraq continue to face threats to their safety, particularly
in the unrest that has followed the regime's collapse. CPJ has documented
recent incidents in which armed Iraqis have threatened, detained, fired
upon, or physically attacked reporters.
On Sunday, April 13, a CNN crew led by senior correspondent Brent Sadler
came under fire from forces apparently loyal to Saddam Hussein in Tikrit
moments after being waved through an Iraqi checkpoint inside the city.
The crew's armed security escort returned fire, and the crew fled the
scene. Sadler reported that CNN producer Maria Fleet was hit by a bullet
fragment, which her flak jacket repelled. A CNN driver was also slightly
injured.
"In some rare cases, such as in Somalia and Afghanistan, journalists have
employed armed security guards to cover a particularly dangerous conflict,"
said CPJ acting director Joel Simon. "However, this practice can jeopardize
the safety of all journalists by making them appear parties to the conflict."
In a separate incident on Friday, April 11, Iraqi fighters near Tikrit
detained and bound with rope CNN reporter Kevin Sites for several hours.
Sites reported that the men accused him and his cameraman, interpreter,
and security guard of being spies but later released them after negotiating
with village elders. Some of his crew were beaten by their captors, he
said.
Click
here to read Sites' account.
"Although the fighting in this conflict may have subsided, the security
situation for those covering events remains precarious," added CPJ's Simon.
In other developments:
On Saturday, April 12, armed Iraqis briefly detained three Malaysian
journalists in Baghdad and released them three hours later, according
to press reports. New Straits Times photographer Mohd Anuar Hashim,
Radio Television Malaysia cameraman Omar Salleh, and The Sun reporter
Terence Fernandez were returning to their hotel after accompanying a Malaysian
medical relief team that was delivering supplies to two hospitals in Baghdad
when some 100 Iraqis ambushed their two cars, according to the New
Straits Times. The journalists were shot at and detained before being
freed.
Also on Saturday, Turkish journalists Kemal Batur, a reporter for Sky
Turk television, and Mesut Gengec, a cameraman for Show TV, were wounded
when their car came under fire in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul. The
journalists had been traveling by car along with other Turkish journalists
and were heading to a nearby hospital to report on looting. Officials
at Show TV said they believed that hospital guards defending the facility
from looters had fired at the journalists. Batur lost two fingers after
being shot in the hand. Gengec was injured by a bullet fragment in the
head.
On Thursday, April 10, a reporter and a photographer for the Minneapolis
Star Tribune was confronted by an Iraqi carrying a hand grenade
just outside the northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk, according to a dispatch
by one of the reporters. Reporter Paul McEnroe and photographer Richard
Sennott were just outside the oil refineries of Kirkuk when six Iraqi
fighters thought to be loyal to Saddam Hussein approached the journalists,
who were traveling with Kurdish fighters. According to McEnroe, one of
the men carrying a grenade wanted to kill them because they were Americans.
The journalists escaped when Kurdish militia opened fire on the fighters,
killing one.

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