For IPS and those closely associated with slain
reporter Alaa Hassan, June 28 was a day unlike any other for the first time
since the beginning of the war in Iraq, IPS lost a reporter in the line of duty.
Hassan's killing marks the second time in its 42-year history that IPS has
lost one of its own to violence. In February 1990, an armed gang abducted and
killed IPS journalist Richard De Zoysa in Sri Lanka.
Hassan's vicious killing he was shot five times when his car was sprayed
with bullets was a shocking reminder of the perils facing many independent,
non-embedded journalists reporting from war-torn areas of conflict.
Early reports of the shooting suggested that Hassan was not targeted for being
a journalist or more specifically, an Iraqi journalist he was merely "in
the wrong place at the wrong time," as a previous IPS report stated. But
the brutal attack incited statements of condemnation and calls for more effective
measures to ensure the safety of journalists in Iraq.
Koichiro Matsuura, the director-general of the UN Educational, Scientific,
and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), the only UN agency with a mandate to defend
freedom of expression and a free press, issued a statement denouncing Hassan's
killing.
"I condemn the killing of Alaa Hassan," Matsuura said. "Murders
are part of the tragic daily reality of Iraq today, and journalists have to
confront this reality more than any other profession."
Seventy percent of the 75 reporters killed in Iraq since the March 2003 U.S.-led
invasion have been Iraqi, Frank Smyth, the Washington representative of the
Committee to Protect Journalists, recently told IPS.
However, the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) puts that number
higher. In a statement condemning Hassan's killing, IFJ said the total number
of journalists killed in Iraq, including Hassan, since the start of the war
is 131.
"The death of another Iraqi fills us with sorrow and anger," said
IFJ General Secretary Aidan White. "This is a country in which violence
and killing has become a routine and intolerable feature of daily life and in
which journalists continue to be prominent among the victims."
IFJ and IPS have both called for a full and immediate investigation of Hassan's
killing.
"IPS calls on the Iraqi government to conduct a full investigation to
determine the motive for the killing of a journalist on assignment," IPS
Director General Mario Lubetkin said in a letter to Iraqi President Jalal Talabani
"IPS is one the few media organizations covering stories from an Iraqi
perspective and on the ground," Lubetkin said in a separate letter to
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan. "As a part of this arduous journalistic
task, our reporters and stringers have to regularly interact with people living
in a hostile environment of growing and deadly violence."
Telling the story from an Iraqi perspective as a non-embedded journalist in
Iraq is dangerous business. It requires extensive travel into insurgency strongholds
and other areas not controlled by coalition forces to accurately assess how
those people are living and hear their opinions.
"Being embedded allows journalists to tell the troops' side, but it does
not answer the question about the other sides of the event," Thomas Rosenstiel,
director of the Project for Excellence in Journalism (PEJ), told IPS.
Furthermore, because the conflict in Iraq and more recently, the violent
flare-ups between Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon is not between two
legitimate governments, but rather among one government, an occupying power,
and an insurgent group, targeting journalists has become a new battlefield strategy,
according to Rosenstiel.
"Modern warfare in the 21st century is about publicity," Rosenstiel
said. "Some people think it's in their strategic military interest to kill
journalists."
"To continue to do their job of informing the public without restrictions,
they are permanently exposed to the violence that has become so horrifyingly
commonplace," Matsuura said of journalists in his statement condemning
Hassan's killing. "We salute their courage, but we must also do the utmost
to improve their security, as the work of journalists is essential to bring
democracy back to a country has endured decades of oppression and violence."
Rosenstiel added that journalists who travel alone, as Hassan had traveled,
must do so "judiciously" because of the many dangers. He said that
having a security force is costly and can be conspicuous, especially in areas
where blending-in reduces the risks of being targeted.
As an Iraqi, Hassan did not have to blend in, yet he is still the victim of
a vicious cycle of violence that has marred attempts at democratizing the country.
Hassan, who was just 35 years old when he was killed, is survived by his pregnant
wife, his mother, five brothers, and five sisters.
Other media outlets also sent messages of condolence and solidarity. "We
at Antiwar.com are saddened and shocked to hear of the death of Mr. Hassan,"
Eric Garris, managing editor of Antiwar.com, a popular anti-imperialist website,
wrote to IPS. "He was an excellent and courageous journalist. He will be
missed by many."
(Inter Press Service)