New York, September 24, 2004The Committee to
Protect Journalists is alarmed that Fatmire Terdevci, an investigative
reporter with the Kosovo independent daily Koha Ditore, was shot
and wounded yesterday, according to The Associated Press and local CPJ
sources.
Yesterday, Terdevci, 30, was traveling from Glogovac, a small town in
central Kosovo, to the capital, Pristina, in a car belonging to the Catholic
humanitarian organization Caritas. At around 7:30 p.m., at least one assailant
shot and wounded her in the left arm, Nafer Miftari, deputy editor of
Koha Ditore told CPJ. She was not on an assignment at the time.
Two bullets were fired from behind; one went through the car's windshield,
and the other hit Terdevci. Her brother and a Caritas worker were also
in the car, but only Terdevci was wounded, Miftari said.
Terdevci was treated overnight at the Pristina Central Hospital and was
released this morning. Her condition is stable, Miftari told CPJ.
"Terdevci is one of our best investigative reporters," Baton Haxhiu, executive
director of the Kosovo Journalists' Association, told CPJ. "She oftentimes
writes on sensitive subjects." However, Haxhiu would not speculate about
the possible motive for the attack.
Miftari told CPJ that Terdevci usually writes about official corruption,
smuggling of goods over the Kosovo-Montenegro border, and organized crime
in Kosovo.
U.N. police are currently investigating the incident.
"We are deeply disturbed by the assault on our colleague," CPJ's Executive
Director Ann Cooper said. "We urge authorities to investigate this case
aggressively and bring the perpetrators to justice."
The predominantly ethnic Albanian province of Kosovo remains part of Serbia
and Montenegro but has been run by a temporary U.N. administration since
June 1999.

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