New York, September 22, 2005The Committee to Protect
Journalists today condemned the shooting of an engineer working for
al-Iraqiya television in Mosul, the third killing of an Iraqi media
employee in the northern city in less than a week. Ahlam Youssef was
shot to death on Wednesday while driving with her husband, who was also
killed. Their son was seriously wounded in the attack, Samer al-Obeidi,
editor-in-chief of al-Iraqiya in Baghdad, told CPJ.
"We are gravely alarmed that insurgents are intensifying their murderous
campaign
against Iraqi journalists and media employees," said CPJ Executive Ann
Cooper. "With the foreign press unable to move around freely for fear
of attack, Iraqis have become the eyes and ears of the world in this
conflict. The recent violence is threatening to cut off this critical
source of information," she added.
Youssef 's murder continues a deadly trend in Mosul. Firas Maadidi,
36, bureau chief for As-Saffir and chief editor of the local
daily Al-Masar, was killed by unidentified gunmen in the city
on Tuesday. On Monday, CPJ reported the murder of Hind Ismail, a 28-year-old
reporter for As-Saffir, whose body was found in the southern
Mosul suburb of al-Muthana. As-Saffir, based in Baghdad, has
a strong pro-democracy editorial position and is running a campaign
to educate Iraqis on the importance of the new constitution and the
upcoming general elections, local journalists said. It also criticizes
insurgent attacks against Iraqi civilians, calling them terrorist operations,
they said.
Al-Iraqiya has been increasingly targeted because of its ties to the
U.S.-supported Iraqi government. Insurgents in Mosul have killed at
least three other employees of the station and its affiliates in 2005,
and Al-Iraqiya offices have repeatedly come under mortar attack.
The killings bring the death toll for journalists to 56 since the Iraq
conflict began in March 2003. Two-thirds of those killed have been Iraqi
journalists. Six journalists have been killed in Mosul alone in 2005.
See a full statistical
snapshot of journalist deaths in Iraq.
