New York, June 21, 2005—The Committee to Protect Journalists condemns
Saturday's shooting in Baghdad of Jawad Kadhem, an Iraqi correspondent
for the Dubai-based satellite channel Al-Arabiya. Kadhem was seriously
injured in the attack, which was believed to be the work of insurgents.
Najib Bencherif, Al-Arabiya's head of correspondents in Dubai, told
CPJ that the shooting occurred as Kadhem left a popular restaurant near
the German embassy. The neighborhood is outside the heavily fortified
Green Zone, but is normally a well-guarded area.
Bencherif said that two armed men ordered Kadhem to go with them in
an apparent kidnap attempt. When Kadhem refused, the men shot him in
the neck and the chest. A third shot struck Kadhem in the spine as he
attempted run back into the restaurant.
Kadhem was in serious condition today in a hospital in Amman, Jordan,
where he was transferred after getting initial treatment in Baghdad,
Bencherif told CPJ. Kadhem is scheduled to undergo surgery tomorrow,
he said.
Bencherif told CPJ that an obscure Sunni group calling itself Jund Al-Sahaba
claimed responsibility in an Internet posting. Agence France-Press reported
that the group claimed that Kadhem is "a malicious Shia," accused the
station of "treason," and said that journalists who supported the United
States or antagonized the Sunnis of Iraq would "face the same fate as
Jawad Kadhem." The group also accused Al-Arabiya of being a "mouthpiece
of the Americans."
The statement's authenticity could not be confirmed.
"We deplore this shameful attack against a civilian," CPJ Executive
Director Ann Cooper said. "Our thoughts and best wishes for a quick
recovery go out to our colleague Jawad Kadhem."
At least 45 journalists and 20 media support workers have been killed
in Iraq since March 2003. Insurgent actions are responsible for the
bulk of deaths.
Mouthana Ibrahim, a Mosul-based correspondent for Al-Arabiya, was shot
late last month in an attack blamed on insurgents. While traveling with
his family in an industrial area, Ibrahim stopped his car to film a
fire when the attack occurred. Ibrahim had been threatened repeatedly
and the attack is presumed to have been motivated by his work for the
station.
The office of Al-Arabiya was attacked in Baghdad in October 2004, killing
five employees of the station. Two of the station's journalists were
fatally shot by U.S. troops at a military checkpoint in Baghdad in March
2004.
