New York, March 26, 2003—The Committee
to Protect Journalists (CPJ) is concerned about the safety of a group of at least
three journalists in Baghdad who have reportedly been expelled from the country.
Newsday reporter Matt McAllester and photographer Moises Saman
were last heard from Monday evening. Molly Bingham, a freelance photographer,
is also missing. There were conflicting reports that Iraqi officials took the
three journalists from the Hotel Palestine in Baghdad, telling them they were
being expelled from the country allegedly because of visa problems. Some journalists
in Baghdad reported that the journalists were put on buses headed for Damascus,
Syria. Others said the bus was headed to Amman, Jordan. However, as of this evening,
the journalists remain missing. Also, in Baghdad,
there are conflicting reports about whether the Al-Rashid Hotel—until recently
the main residence for foreign media stationed in the capital—was slightly damaged
last night in the U.S. and coalition military strike on Iraqi media facilities.
(Click here for CPJ's
statement about the attack on Iraqi television) One CPJ source in Baghdad,
reported that no journalists were in the hotel at the time of the bombing.
Nasdaq rejects accreditation applications Meanwhile in New York,
the Nasdaq stock market rejected accreditation applications of business correspondents
Ammar Shankari and Ramzi Shiber who work for the Qatar-based satellite channel
Al-Jazeera. The two journalists had applied for accreditation at the Nasdaq after
the NYSE pulled their press accreditation yesterday, citing alleged attempts to
reduce the number of journalists on the stock exchange floor and give priority
to financial networks and their reporters. The Al-Jazeera journalists
were the only reporters expelled from the NYSE. A Nasdaq spokeswoman confirmed
that the journalists' accreditation was denied, but would not provide further
comment or details. The Los Angeles Times, however, quoted Nasdaq
spokesman Scott Peterson yesterday as saying that "in light of Al-Jazeera's recent
conduct during the war, in which they have broadcast footage of U.S. POWs in alleged
violation of the Geneva Convention, they are not welcome to broadcast from our
facility at this time." The spokeswoman told CPJ that she could neither "confirm
nor deny" his statement. Other developments - Two Iranian
journalists—television producer Ali Montazeri and cameraman Abdel Reza Abbasi—who
were reportedly detained by non-uniformed soldiers have been released and are
enroute to Tehran, said Salwa Khazem, head of newsgathering at the Dubai Business
Channel, one of a number of media outlets for whom the journalists were working.
The journalists were detained earlier this week after arriving in Iraq from Iran
by boat, Khazem said.
Sultan Sulieman, an editor for Al-Hayat-LBC in
Beirut, for whom the journalists were also on assignment, told CPJ that soldiers
in civilian clothing detained the journalists who were filming in Iraq's Al-Fao
peninsula. - A non-embedded U.S. reporter in northern Kuwait
told CPJ that she and other reporters, who had followed a British convoy in the
Safwan-Al Zubyr-Basra-Umm Qasr area, retreated to Kuwait on Monday when the security
situation there deteriorated. "There is very little military control of the south
and an increasingly strong Iraqi guerrilla war going on there," she said. "A great
many journalists operating in the south have been shot at or otherwise gotten
into trouble."
- In Sudan, police attacked correspondent Islam Salih
and cameraman Muhamamd el-Hassan, a correspondent and cameraman respectively for
Al-Jazeera, as they covered anti-war student protests in Khartoum near the U.S.
embassy on March 22. Salih said four policemen approached them and began beating
them with batons as they interviewed students.

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