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Protest to Highlight Plight of Iraqi Journalists

Posted by Julie Tomlin on 12 June 2006 at 15:59
Tags: International, Iraq, Journalism

A day of protest on 15 June - Iraq’s National Day of the Press - will draw attention to the “unspeakable suffering” of journalists in the country.

The International Federation of Journalists has counted at least 129 media victims since the US invasion of Iraq in 2003. Violence by extremists and targeting of journalists by warring factions is cited as the major threat. The satellite channel Al-Arabiya puts the figure at 144.

“No journalist and no journalists’ group in the world is untouched by the routine intimidation of media and the rising death toll among our Iraqi colleagues,” said Aidan White,General Secretary of the IFJ. “We mourn, but we also demand action to end this slaughter.”

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Carroll kidnappers demanded $8m

Posted by Martin Stabe on 13 April 2006 at 10:13
Tags: ABC, Iraq, Journalism, United States, War reporting

The man who negotiated the release of American journalist Jill Carroll has said that her kidnappers were demanding a ransom of $8 million.

Speaking to the American television network ABC,  Sheikh Sattam al-Gaood, a former business associate of Saddam Hussein and supporter of the Iraqi insurgency, described the kidnapping of the freelance working for the Boston-based Christian Science Monitor as “a mistake”.

Al-Gaood, who was one of the people thanked by Carroll’s family following her release, denied that he had paid the ransom demanded by her kidnappers, but had instead arranged to pay for widows and orphans of Iraqi insurgents.

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Al Jazeera’s Gizbert recounts Merseyside start

Posted by Martin Stabe on 7 April 2006 at 17:46
Tags: ABC, Al Jazeera, Iraq, Journalism, Regionals

The Liverpool Daily Post has a lengthy interview with Richard Gizbert, the TV reporter who won an Employment Tribunal hearing his dismissal from American network ABC News and will now be presenting a media programme for Al Jazeera International.

Before returning to Canada and eventually becoming an experienced war correspondent, Gizbert lived on Merseyside. He notched his first foreign news story at 16 while on a work experience stint on the Birkenhead News:

“I used to go to the chippie near the office for lunch because I was too young to go to the pub with the others. It was run by a Greek Cypriot family and their daughter kinda caught my attention. She went away and when I asked when would she be back her Dad said that they didn’t know - because she’d gone back to Cyprus for a visit and got caught up in the conflict between the Greeks and the Turks there at the time.

“And that’s when I got my first real story which had the headline WIRRAL GIRL CAUGHT ON WAR-TORN ISLAND. It was a very good local story. I kept it and still have it along with the ribbon-cutting photo captions and stuff.”

Gizbert was in Liverpool recently for the National Union of Journalists conference last month. At the conference, the NUJ decided to support Gizbert’s defense fund for ABC’s expected appeal agains the Employmnet Tribunal ruling. As we reported at the time, the escalating costs of the case have left Gizbert in debt.

“I’m worse than skint. In fact skint’s looking pretty good to me right now,” Gizbert told the Daily Post.

The NUJ is backing Gizbert’s defence because of the precident his case could set. If Gizbert prevails, journalists would be safe from being forced to accept dangerous assignments.

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Journalist freed in Iraq

Posted by Martin Stabe on 30 March 2006 at 13:33
Tags: Iraq, Journalism, Online, RSS, United States, War reporting

American journalist Jill Carroll, who was held in Iraq for nearly three months, has been freed. The Christian Science Monitor is posting updates on its web site as details emerge about their reporter’s release.

There is also an RSS feed for updates on the story (RSS).

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