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New Iraq media deaths spark call for report on all unsolved killings of journalists
Report, International Federation of Journalists (Sep 16, 2008)
The International Federation of Journalists welcomed the Iraqi government's investigation into the recent killing of four employees of Iraqi satellite TV channel Al Sharqiya in Mosul but said that authorities must investigate all unsolved killings, including the assassination of Iraqi union president Shihab Al-Timimi, if they want to ensure press freedom in the country. GO

Cameraman freed by U.S.; another held
Report, Committee to Protect Journalists (Sep 10, 2008)
Omar Husham, 28, a cameraman with Baghdad TV, a satellite channel owned by the Iraqi Islamic Party, was freed on Friday without charges after one day in custody by U.S. forces, according to one of his colleagues. Ibrahim Jassam, a freelance photographer for Reuters, was arrested last week during a raid at his home in Mahmoodiya, south of Baghdad, Reuters reported. The Committee to Protect Journalists has documented several cases of Iraqi journalists who have been held by U.S. forces for weeks or months without charge or conviction. All were released without any substantiated charges. GO

Journalist murdered outside his home in Mosul
Report, Reporters Without Borders (Jun 17, 2008)

Reporters Without Borders strongly condemned the murder of Iraqi journalist Mohiddin Abdulhamid al-Nakib, gunned down outside his home in the northern city of Mosul, 370 kms north of Baghdad, on 17 June 2008. His death brings to 216 the number of media workers killed in Iraq since the start of the war in March 2003, 12% of whom have died in Mosul, the country's second most dangerous city for media professionals.

GO


New report details challenges to journalists working in Iraq and the region
Report, International Federation of Journalists (Jun 17, 2008)
Sixty-five media workers killed in Iraq in 2007, with little investigation into their deaths. An Arab charter that gives governments control of what satellite channels can broadcast. Up to five years in prison for insulting the President in Egypt or Tunisia. This is what journalists working in the region can expect, says the International Federation of Journalists in a new report. GO

Journalist leader dies after attack
Report, Reporters Without Borders (Mar 5, 2008)
The president of the Iraqi Journalists' Syndicate died on 27 February, four days after being seriously wounded when he was attacked by unidentified gunmen in Baghdad. Shihab al-Tamimi was wounded in the stomach, shoulder and face when his car was hit by a hail of bullets in a targeted attack on 23 February. He died in hospital on 27 February. Al-Tamimi's son Rabie was also in the car and was injured in the attack. GO

Journalist freed in Mosul
Statement, Reporters Without Borders (Jan 4, 2008)
Reporters Without Borders has welcomed the release of Faisal Abbas Ghazala, a correspondent for the satellite TV station Kolsat, on 21 December 2007 after more than a month in detention in Mosul, but called on the Kurdistan regional government to show greater care and moderation in its measures affecting the news media. GO

Eleven of Iraqi editor's relatives murdered in Baghdad
Statement, Reporters Without Borders (Dec 3, 2007)
Reporters Without Borders is shocked by the murders of 11 close relatives of Dia al-Kawwaz, the Amman-based editor of the online newspaper "Shabeqat Akhbar al-Iraq", in an attack on his family home on 25 November 2007 in Baghdad. Kawwaz recently received telephone threats from Iraqi militia members. GO


 
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