Media watchdog wants action after record Iraq toll

Fri Jun 1, 2007 7:02pm BST
 
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By Paul Tait

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Media advocate Reporters Without Borders has called for the establishment of a special police unit to investigate media killings in Iraq after a record 12 journalists were slain in May.

The Paris-based group expressed deep shock after the deaths of four journalists in five days and said police should also set up a witness protection programme to help in investigations of media killings.

"The Iraqi government must fulfil their duty to protect journalists," RSF said in a statement on its Web site (www.rsf.org).

RSF's statement and its count of 11 journalists killed in May, all but one Iraqi, did not include the death of Saif Fakhry, an Iraqi cameraman working for the U.S. Associated Press news agency.

Fakhry was shot twice while walking to a mosque near his home in Baghdad on Thursday. He had worked for AP Television News (APTN) since August 2004 and is survived by his wife, who is due to give birth to their first child next month, APTN said.

Since the fall of Saddam Hussein, who controlled all media, Iraqis have seen the proliferation of newspapers and television.

Many are controlled by political or religious factions, and Iraqi journalists, dozens of whose colleagues have been killed or kidnapped, complain some officials put them under heavy pressure.

Journalists are increasingly finding themselves caught in the crossfire in Iraq's sectarian conflict and the Sunni Arab insurgency against U.S forces and the Iraqi government.  Continued...

 

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