New
York, October 24, 2005The Committee to Protect Journalists
condemns today's deadly car bomb attacks on Baghdad's Palestine Hotel,
which is widely used by foreigners, including journalists and news organizations
reporting from Iraq.
In a coordinated attack, three large car bombs detonated outside the
hotel at dusk, killing as many as 20 people, injuring a number of others,
and causing extensive damage to the hotel, according to press reports.
Associated Press Television News captured footage of one of the explosive-laden
vehicles, a cement truck, crashing through the concrete blast walls
that guard the Palestine Hotel and the neighboring Sheraton Hotel before
detonating.
Identities of the dead and wounded were not immediately known. Agence
France-Presse, citing a "senior security source," said that many of
the casualties appeared to involve security guards, hotel staff, and
passersby. The AP reported that at least three unidentified photojournalists
were injured and taken to hospitals.
The blasts heavily damaged the hotel's southern exterior, while glass
shattered and light fixtures blew out inside, the AP said.
At least 57 journalists and 22 media support staff have been killed
in Iraq since March 2003. Insurgent attacks, including crossfire, suicide
bombings, and targeted murders, are the leading cause of media fatalities
in Iraqaccounting for the deaths of 34 journalist and 18 media
support workers.
The Palestine Hotel and Sheraton Hotel have come under rocket fire from
insurgents in the past, although there have been no media fatalities
from those insurgent attacks. Two journalists did die when a U.S. tank
opened fire on the Palestine Hotel in April 2003; a CPJ investigation
later found that the killings were not deliberate but were avoidable.
Insurgent groups have carried out other, bloody bombings against news
offices. In 2004, a car bomb ripped through the Baghdad bureau of the
Dubai-based satellite broadcaster Al-Arabiya in November, killing five
employees and wounding several others. Armed groups also carried out
mortar attacks against offices belong to the U.S. backed Iraq Media
Network, the national broadcaster.
"These appalling attacks are fresh reminders of the myriad dangers facing
those who continue to report from Iraq," CPJ Executive Director Ann
Cooper said.
