New
York, November 1, 2004The Committee to Protect Journalist condemns
this weekend's car bomb attack against the Baghdad bureau of the Dubai-based
satellite broadcaster Al-Arabiya. Five station employees were among the
seven killed, and more than a dozen other Al-Arabiya employees were wounded
in the apparent insurgent attack on Saturday, the station staff told CPJ.
Those killed were Ali Adnan, a security guard; Hassan Alwan, an engineer;
kitchen staff members Ramziya Moushee and Alahin Hussein; and Nabil Hussein,
a gardener, Al-Arabiya confirmed to CPJ. Al-Arabiya reporter Najwa Qassem
said 14 other bureau employees, among them five journalists, were wounded
in the blast. The bureau, in the upscale Mansour neighborhood, was used
by two other Saudi-owned news stationsthe satellite channel Al-Akhbariya
and Al-Arabiya's sister channel, Middle East Broadcasting (MBC).
"We deplore this reprehensible attack," CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper
said. "There is no justification for targeting innocent civilians, including
journalists who are simply doing their jobs. We send our deepest condolences
to the families of those who were killed."
Al-Arabiya's Web site reported Sunday that a previously unknown group
calling itself the "Jihad Martyrs Brigades" claimed responsibility for
the attack in a statement posted on the Internet. The statement called
Saturday's attack "just a warning" and threatened more attacks on Al-Arabiya
and other media outlets in Iraq. The statement's authenticity could not
be independently verified.
Earlier, a group calling itself the 1920 Brigades said it had carried
out the attack, but Al-Arabiya later reported that the same group denied
responsibility in a recorded tape.
About 35 staffers were meeting on the first floor when the bomb exploded
directly outside the bureau's front entrance. The blast, which took place
in a neighborhood that also houses Iraqi officials and government buildings,
left a large crater in the street outside and collapsed the building's
first floor, causing a fire.
Al-Arabiya's Web site reported that the station has received numerous
threats from those describing themselves as supporters of "Abu Musab al-Zarqawi"
protesting its coverage, and demanding that the station support the "jihad"
against the U.S occupation and Iraqi government.
Since the U.S.-led war in Iraq began in March 2003 at least 36 journalists
and eighteen media workers have been killed, including three reporters
from Al-Arabiya. Iraqis constitute more than 80 percent of the journalists
and media workers killed in 2004.

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