New York, August 16, 2004The Committee to Protect Journalists
(CPJ) condemns attempts during the weekend by Iraqi authorities to bar
media from the Iraqi city of Najaf, where U.S. and Iraqi forces have been
fighting Shiite insurgents.
According to CPJ sources in Iraq, most journalists were forced to leave
the city as a result of the ban, although a number of reporters managed
to remain. Today, Iraqi police informed some journalists in Najaf that
the ban was no longer in effect, but that officials could no guarantee
their safety.
On Sunday, August 15, local Iraqi authorities in Najaf ordered all journalists
to leave the city, citing concerns for their safety, according to international
press reports. According to the New York Times, Najaf police chief,
Gen. Ghaleb al-Jazairi, summoned journalists to the outskirts of Najaf's
Old City and gave them two hours to leave. He threatened to arrest Iraqi
translators and drivers working for Western media outlets. Al-Jazairi
cited an alleged bomb threat to the Bar Najaf Hotel, where most journalists
were residing.
The U.K. Independent reported that Iraqi police subsequently "made
two visits during the afternoon and early evening to the Bar Najaf Hotel"
and ordered journalists to leave or face arrest. The newspaper said that
the hotel later came under fire, noting that "although there was no confirmation
that the bullets had been fired by police, the hotel is only a few hundred
meters from the local police station and much farther from the main positions
of [Shiite cleric Muqtadah al-]Sadr's insurgents."
The Independent and other British newspapers reported that in a
separate incident the office of Najaf Governor Adnan Zurfi, where journalists
had congregated to protest the ban, a plainclothes security officer warned
journalists to leave in two hours or they would be "shot."
CPJ is investigating reports that Iraqi police temporarily detained a
photographer for a Western news agency and an Iranian television journalist.

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