New York, March 22, 2003 An Australian journalist was killed, and
several British journalists disappeared today while covering escalating hostilities
in Iraq. Free-lance Australian cameraman Paul Moran, who was on assignment
for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC), was killed today in an apparent
suicide bombing when a man detonated a car at a checkpoint in northeastern Iraq.
Another Australian journalist, ABC correspondent Eric Campbell, was injured in
the incident. Michael Ware, Time magazine’s northern Iraq correspondent
and a witness to the incident, told his editor, Howard Chua-Eoan, that several
foreign journalists were standing outside a checkpoint on the edge of Gerdigo,
a town in northern Iraq near Halabja, interviewing people who were leaving the
town in the wake of a U.S. cruise missile bombardment that began last night, Friday,
March 21, and continued until early this morning. U.S. missiles were
targeting strongholds in the region of Ansar Al-Islam, a group that the United
States designates as a terrorist organization. The area where the journalists
were conducting interviews was reportedly under the control of the Patriotic Union
of Kurdistan (PUK), a rival of Ansar Al-Islam that had just taken over the area.
At around 3 p.m., a taxi drove to the checkpoint near PUK soldiers and Moran,
and the driver then detonated his vehicle. Most of the other journalists had just
left the scene. Moran, who was filming at the time, was standing only a few feet
from the checkpoint and was killed immediately. Campbell was injured by shrapnel.
Chua-Eoan said it appeared that the bomber was targeting the PUK soldiers,
not the journalists. According to The Associated Press, at least four other people
were killed in the bombing. The PUK has blamed Ansar Al-Islam for the attack.
Chua-Eoan told CPJ that foreign journalists in northern Iraq had recently
received warnings from U.S. State Department and Kurdish intelligence officials
that Ansar Al-Islam may target members of the media, as well as the hotel where
most journalists are staying, the Sulaymaniyeh Palace. Journalists
missing Three members of an ITV News crew were reported missing earlier
today, March 22, after coming under fire while driving to the southern Iraqi city
of Basra, according to the press office of ITN, which produces ITV News. The journalists
were not embedded with military forces. Correspondent Terry Lloyd, cameraman
Fred Nerac, translator Hussein Othman, and cameraman Daniel Demoustier were driving
today in two marked press vehicles in the city of Iman Anas when they came under
fire, according to ITN. Demoustier, who was injured during the incident
but managed to escape, was driving one of the vehicles. He said he did not see
what happened to Lloyd, who was seated next to him, or to the other members of
the crew. “Heavy gunfire started towards my car from the right hand
side and I had to duck down straight away,” said Demoustier in an interview with
ITV News. “A split second and I looked to the right and the right door where my
correspondent [Lloyd] was and it was open and he was not there anymore.”
Demoustier fled the area after joining other journalists who happened to
be driving by. Situation in Baghdad tense Journalists in the
capital, Baghdad, describe a very tense scene. There were reports of Iraqi officials
confiscating tape, destroying equipment, and detaining or expelling journalists.
On the afternoon of Friday, March 21, Iraqi officials detained free-lance
journalist Nate Thayer and an American free-lance photographer while they were
reporting on the streets of Baghdad. The two were held for four hours.
In an account published today, March 22, in the online magazine Slate,
Thayer wrote, “We were offered a choice between serving as human shields in government
buildings or heading by car for the Iranian or Syrian border—which is impossible,
since there are no roads, and incredibly unwise, since American forces might be
bombing fleeing traffic. Eventually, we were returned to our hotel, with the warning
that we could be expelled or drafted as unwilling human shields at any time.”
The journalists remain in Baghdad. Meanwhile, the four-person CNN crew
that Iraqi officials expelled yesterday arrived safely in Jordan on Saturday afternoon.
Iraqi officials had complained that the network was “worse than the American administration,”
according to CNN reporter Nic Robertson. 
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