New York, November 12, 2004The Committee to Protect Journalists
is deeply disturbed by a new directive from Iraqi authorities that warns
news organizations to reflect the government's positions in their reporting
or face unspecified action.
The warning came in a statement released Thursday but dated November 9
by the government regulatory Media High Commission. The commission cited
the 60-day state of emergency, declared when U.S.-led forces began their
offensive in Fallujah this week, The Associated Press and Reuters reported.
The state of emergency covers all of Iraq except the Kurdish north, giving
the prime minister additional powers to quash the insurgency before elections
in January.
Directing the news media to differentiate between "innocent citizens of
Fallujah" and insurgents, the commission instructed journalists not to
attach "patriotic descriptions to groups of killers and criminals," according
to the statement, obtained by CPJ. The statement also asked the media
to "set aside space in your news coverage to make the position of the
Iraqi government, which expresses the aspirations of most Iraqis, clear."
"You must be precise and objective in handling news and information,"
the statement said. "We hope you comply ... otherwise we regret we will
be forced to take all the legal measures to guarantee higher national
interests," it added.
"We are very troubled by this directive, which is an attempt to control
news coverage through government coercion," said CPJ Executive Director
Ann Cooper. "It damages the government's credibility in establishing a
free and democratic society."
In August, Iraqi authorities closed the Baghdad office of the satellite
television channel Al-Jazeera and barred the Qatar-based station from
newsgathering in Iraq after deeming its coverage to be against the Iraqi
people and government. The government extended the ban indefinitely a
month later.

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Original statement issued by Media High Commission
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