New York, February 18, 2005Two Indonesian television journalists
and their driver were seized by Iraqi gunmen in the city of Ramadi this
week, an Indonesian government spokesman told reporters today.
Reporter Meutya Hafid and a cameraman identified as Budiyanto, who work
for Indonesia's 24-hour news channel Metro TV, went missing on Tuesday
while driving from Amman, Jordan. The journalists had gone to Iraq to
cover this week's observance of Ashura, one of the most important religious
events for Shiites, according to station officials.
"We have received information ... from the owner of a car rented by
two journalists from Metro TV that, on February 15, their
vehicle heading for Ramadi was halted by an armed group," Marty Natalegawa,
a spokesman for the Indonesian foreign ministry, told reporters, according
to Reuters.
"The car, driver and the two journalists have been taken
to an unknown location," Natalegawa said, while noting that the government
had not yet officially classified the seizure of the two journalists
as an abduction. He said witnesses reported seeing the journalists'
car entering Ramadi and that "it was stopped and taken away."
At least 23 other journalists have been kidnapped by armed groups in
Iraq since April 2004, when insurgents began targeting foreigners for
abduction. The most recent was Feb. 4 when gunmen seized Italian journalist
Giuliana Sgrena, a reporter for the Rome-based daily Il Manifesto,
near Baghdad University. On Wednesday, her kidnappers released a video
showing her pleading for her life and calling on U.S. and coalition
troops to leave Iraq.

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