New
York, February 4, 2005The Committee to Protect Journalists
is alarmed by the abduction of an Italian journalist today in the Iraqi
capital, Baghdad. Gunmen seized Giuliana Sgrena, a reporter for the
Rome-based Italian daily Il Manifesto, near Baghdad University,
according to The Associated Press, which cited Italian and Iraqi officials.
Iraqi police said the armed men stopped Sgrena's vehicle, released either
one or two Iraqi reporters and a driver traveling with her, and fled
the scene, according to international news reports. CNN's Web site reported
that Sgrena had been conducting interviews at Nahrain University, which
shares a campus with Baghdad University.
Armed groups in Iraq have abducted at least 23 journalists since April
2004, when insurgents began a campaign of targeting foreigners for kidnapping.
Twenty-one have been released to date, including French journalists
George Malbrunot and Christian Chesnot who were freed in December 2004
after being held captive for four months by an Iraqi insurgent group.
One hostage, Italian freelancer Enzo Baldoni, was executed by his captors
last year.
Two other journalists remain missing in Iraq, including veteran French
foreign correspondent Florence Aubenas of the daily newspaper Liberation,
who was last seen in Baghdad on January 5 with her Iraqi translator,
Hussein Hanoun al-Saadi.
"Nearly a week after elections we are reminded just how dangerous Iraq
remains for so many, including those who are trying to report events
to the rest of the world," CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper said. "We
deplore this despicable targeting of innocent civilians and call for
the immediate release of our colleagues who are being held captive."
