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U.S. Government Accused of War Crimes against Journalists

 
 
Reply Thu 10 Apr, 2003 06:39 pm
U.S. Government Accused of War Crimes against Journalists
Julio Godoy - IPS - 4/10/03

International journalists' organisations are accusing the U.S. government of committing war crimes in Iraq by intentionally firing at war correspondents.

PARIS, Apr 10 (IPS) - International journalists' organisations are accusing the U.S. government of committing war crimes in Iraq by intentionally firing at war correspondents.

The Paris-based journalists' organisation 'Reporters without Borders' (RSF, after its French name), called on the International Humanitarian Fact-Finding Commission to investigate whether by attacking journalists in Iraq the U.S.-British coalition forces were not violating international humanitarian law.

"A media outlet cannot be a military target under international law and its equipment and installations are civilian property protected as such under the Geneva Conventions," said Reporters without Border secretary-general Robert Ménard.

"Only an objective and impartial enquiry can determine whether or not the Conventions have been violated," Ménard claimed.

It is the first time since its existence that the International Humanitarian Fact-Finding Commission is being petitioned. Set up in 1991 under the First Additional Protocol of the Geneva Conventions, the Commission's task is investigating any alleged serious violation of international humanitarian law.

Similarly, the Brussels-based International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) called for an independent inquiry on the U.S. attacks against the Palestine Hotel and the bureaus of Al-Jazeera and Abu Dhabi television channels.

The New-York based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) also called the U.S. attacks against journalists in Iraq "a violation of the Geneva Convention."

In a letter to U.S. defence secretary Donald Rumsfeld, CPJ director Joel Simon wrote on Tuesday: "The Committee is gravely concerned by a series of U.S. military strikes against known media locations in Baghdad today that have left three journalists dead and several wounded."

"We believe these attacks violate the Geneva Conventions," Simon pointed out.

On Tuesday, U.S. troops attacked the Baghdad bureau of the Qatar-based Al Jazeera, killing one war correspondent, and wounding another. In another attack, a U.S. tank fired a shell at the Palestine Hotel in Baghdad, killing two other reporters and wounding three.

The hotel is well known as the unofficial Baghdadi centre of international press. A large number of foreign correspondents covering the war stay there.

Ménard, RSF's secretary-general, said that all independent evidence on the U.S. attacks against the hotel shows that the firing was deliberate.

"Film shot by the French television station France 3, and descriptions by journalists, prove that the neighbourhood around the hotel was very quiet at the hour of the attack, and that the U.S. tank crew took their time, waiting for a couple of minutes and adjusting its gun before opening fire," Ménard said.

"This evidence does not match the U.S. version of an attack in self-defence and we can only conclude that the U.S Army deliberately and without warning targeted journalists," Ménard added.

Caroline Sines, a French television correspondent covering the war in Baghdad, confirmed Ménard's accusations against the U.S. troops.

"I was at the Palestine Hotel at the moment of the attack, around one pm, Baghdad time, and my crew filmed everything," Sines said. "Our films shows that the U.S. tank took its time at targeting the 14th floor of the hotel, where many journalists are hosted, at a moment of complete calm," Sines said.

Menard urged the "U.S. forces to prove that the incident was not a deliberate attack to dissuade or prevent journalists from continuing to report on what is happening in Baghdad."

"We are appalled at what happened because it was known that journalists were working both at the Palestine Hotel as well at the Al-Jazeera bureau," Ménard pointed out.

One Al-Jazeera camera operator was also killed on Tuesday by an apparently intentional U.S. bombing of the pan-Arab TV station's offices elsewhere in Baghdad. The nearby premises of Abu Dhabi TV were also damaged by the bombing.

The Qatar-based television network recalled that prior to the conflict, it had provided the U.S. military authorities with the specific coordinates of its Baghdad offices. This information was confirmed by the Committee to Protect Journalists in the letter to Donald Rumsfeld.

"CPJ has seen a copy of Al-Jazeera's February letter to Pentagon spokeswoman Victoria Clarke outlining these coordinates," Joel Simon wrote to Rumsfeld.

Simon called Rumsfeld "to launch an immediate and thorough investigation into these incidents and to make the findings public." The CPJ also recalled to the U.S. military authorities that more than 100 independent journalists continue to operate in Baghdad from both the Palestine and the nearby Sheraton hotels.

"The U.S. military has a clear obligation to avoid harming the correspondents while carrying out (war) operations," Simon said in his letter to Rumsfeld.

Aidan White, General Secretary of the International Federation of Journalists, said, "There is no doubt at all that these attacks could be targeting journalists. If so, they are grave and serious violations of international law."

"The bombing of hotels where journalists are staying and targeting of Arab media is particularly shocking events in a war which is being fought in the name of democracy," White said. "Those who are responsible must be brought to justice".

"The United Nations system and the international media community must be fully engaged in finding out what happened in these cases and action must be taken to ensure it never happens again," White said. "We can expect denials of intent from the military, but what we really want is the truth."

The IFJ says that the global media community, including journalists, media organisations and press freedom campaigners, should join hands under the banner of the newly-formed International News Safety Institute to hold a complete and in depth inquiry.

The INSI is a coalition of more than 100 organisations campaigning for a global news safety programme.

The IFJ also condemned "what appears to be Iraqi tactics of using civilians and journalists as a 'human shield' against attack." "The Baghdad authorities are just as culpable as the U.S. with their reckless disregard for civilian lives," White said.

Both the IFJ and RSF recalled that Al Jazeera has become a frequent target of U.S. and British attacks in Iraq and in Afghanistan.

Earlier in the war in Iraq, four members of the pan-Arab television crew in the southern city of Basra came under gunfire from British tanks on March 29 as they were filming distribution of food by Iraqi government officials.

One of the station's cameramen went missing and was later found to have been held for 12 hours by U.S. troops. Al-Jazeera reporters were the only journalists in Basra at the time.

The Al-Jazeera offices in Kabul, Afghanistan, were also bombed by U.S. forces during the war against the Taliban regime in Afghanistan in November 2001.

To have jurisdiction in a war, the International Humanitarian Fact-Finding Commission has to be petitioned by one of the parties in the conflict or by one of the countries that have recognised its jurisdiction.

To conduct an investigation, all the belligerents must accept its authority. Among the countries involved in the Iraq war, only Australia and the United Kingdom have formally recognised it, allowing an investigation to go ahead as far as they are concerned.

Neither the United States nor Iraq have yet accepted the principle of such an enquiry.

Since the beginning of the Iraqi war on March 20, ten journalists have been killed by the conflicting parties, and two other died in war related accidents. At least eight other correspondents have been wounded. Two other reporters' whereabouts remain unknown.

* Reporters without Borders
* Committee to Protect Journalists
* International Federation of Journalists
* SPAIN: Reporters Boycott Aznar over Deaths of Colleagues in Iraq
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Eve
 
  1  
Reply Thu 10 Apr, 2003 08:29 pm
I just can't figure this -
Didn't those guys know they were in a war zone and that a balcony was not a safe place to be - what were they expecting for goodness sake.
0 Replies
 
cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Thu 10 Apr, 2003 08:59 pm
BBB, It's almost a laughable situation. If the world hasn't noticed yet, this administration does anything it wishes with the blessing from the majority of the American people. c.i.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Thu 10 Apr, 2003 09:15 pm
I have to conclude that the administration has no morals at all, and somehow the majority of the public buys into its actions. It is not uncommon for a society to exhibit signs of such mental illness. I just hope enough people come to their senses soon.
0 Replies
 
Violet Lake
 
  1  
Reply Thu 10 Apr, 2003 09:19 pm
I'm afraid it'll take some kind of "slap" for people to come to their senses.
0 Replies
 
cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Thu 10 Apr, 2003 09:46 pm
Somebody's hand will be worn out! Wink c.i.
0 Replies
 
BumbleBeeBoogie
 
  1  
Reply Sat 12 Apr, 2003 09:14 am
Embedded or In-Bed-With?
Embedded or In-Bed-With?
Analysis - By Miren Gutiérrez
IPS - 4/11/03

ROME, Apr 12 (IPS) - Senator Hiram Johnson would be long forgotten by now, were it not for his one famous quote: ''The first casualty when war comes is truth," he said in 1917, and every armed conflict before or since has brought that phrase back to life.

Now, the Iraq war has added a new phrase to the lexicon of war-time journalism and to the elusive struggle between factual reporting and subtle cheerleading: ''embedded journalists'', those reporters assigned to military units, to live, march and endure hardship with them, reporting from the front-lines hampered only by some security restrictions.

To be sure, there is nothing new about journalists travelling with troops and reporting, as it were, from the foxhole. Ernie Pyle reported the Second World War from the perspective of the average fighting soldier, and his column appeared in more than 300 weekly and 400 daily newspapers and was avidly read both at home and in the trenches. An individualist in the classical American tradition, he would most probably have been offended had he been called an ''embedded'' reporter, with its cog-in-the-machine, corporate connotations.

Yet, in this war, you could be either ''embedded'' or ''unilateral'', the latter a very uncomfortable, risky proposition, with a very limited possibility of being in the right place at the right time. The ''embeds'' could, however, ride into action atop an Abrams tank, videophone at hand.

But at what cost the ride?

Almost 600 journalists - 20 percent of them foreign - have been ''embedded'' with U.S. and British troops in the campaign against Saddam Hussein. They exceed, by far, the number of reporters covering the last conflict in Afghanistan.

Yet U.S. Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has suggested that their audience was watching only ''slices'' of the war.

Judging from an analysis of ''embedded'' television reports in three of the first six days of the war, by the Project for Excellence in Journalism, he is right.

''The embedded coverage,'' the research found, ''is largely anecdotal. It is both exciting and dull, combat focused, and mostly live and unedited. Much of it lacks context but it is usually rich in detail. It has all the virtues and vices of reporting only what you can see.''

Talk about the fog of war.

''The embeds can rightfully claim their place in war journalism history even as they are writing it,'' said 'The Kansas City Star'. ''They've proved adept at conveying both the boredom of war (you're eating how many times a day?) and the danger (Ted Koppel calmly describing his 3rd Infantry unit as it charges through a perilous gap west of Karbala).''

In the frenzy to ''feed the idiot box'', to use an expression from Spike Lee's movie 'Bambozzled', mistakes also happened.

One of the most cited blunders was Fox News correspondent Doug Luzader's report of an infiltration of ''terrorists'' in Kuwait's Camp Pennsylvania, after a grenade attack Mar. 22. It turned out that a lone U.S. soldier was charged in the incident; two of his fellow soldiers were killed.

The Project for Excellence in Journalism study concludes, also, that the public seemed ''better served by having the embedding system than they were from more limited press pools during the Gulf War of 1991 or only halting access to events in Afghanistan''.

U.S. television went heavy on the symbols of patriotism. Stars and Stripes fluttered in on-screen logos, while poignant war images filled lapses between live reporting and advertising breaks.

As the war began, U.S. television assumed that Iraqis would offer no resistance. It generally reflected the pro-war sentiments of the government; rarely showed Iraqi civilian casualties, unless aided by U.S. soldiers; endlessly showcased U.S. weapons technology and resorted to expressions like ''the good guys'' to refer to U.S. troops.

By editing the reality for patriotic reasons, U.S. TV might have achieved exactly the opposite.

As Bill Kovach, founding director of the Committee of Concerned Journalists, said in a prophetic speech during the annual meeting of the Organization of News Ombudsmen in 2002, ''a journalist is never more true to democracy, is never more engaged as a citizen, is never more patriotic, than when aggressively doing the job of independently verifying the news of the day''.

Now, Kovach says: ''I do believe American journalists are failing the public.''

''This kaleidoscopic view of the war is made more confusing by lack of any real reporting on the larger picture by independent journalists,'' he adds. ''Instead almost all efforts to pull the pieces together and show a larger picture is being done by military experts who tend, even when they are wrong, to tell a military story.''

According to Kovach, the untold story is the unintended consequence of this embedded-with-the troops reporting.

''By making the story more personal, and yet showing little of the horror of war, it heightened the patriotic 'my country right or wrong' fever in the United States, and news organizations concerned with mass circulation audiences were reluctant to do in-depth critical reporting of the political and policy decisions involved in the process,'' he says. ''Many - Fox News leading the way - resorted to jingoistic, flag waving rhetoric that at times could be described as propaganda.''

Again, nothing new here. First World War British journalist Philip Gibbs answered critics of his propaganda-driven war reporting by contending that, ''Some of us wrote the truth from the first to the last - apart from the naked realism of horrors and losses and criticism of the facts.''

But even critics of the system admit that many ''embeds'' did their job well. ''As you know, a number of them paid the ultimate price in doing so,'' says Kovach. ''The shortcomings were not the result of embedding but lay outside that area of reporting.''

Up to now, at least 11 journalists have died covering the war. Julio A. Parrado, Christian Liebig, Michael Kelly, and David Bloom were killed while accompanying coalition forces.

In any case, embedded reports were not the only ones the public had access to. At least 100 independent journalists were in Baghdad when the U.S. tanks roamed and roared through the streets of the Iraqi capital.

Their job was not easy.

The Pentagon expelled 'Christian Science Monitor' reporter Phil Smucker from Iraq on grounds that he revealed sensitive military information in broadcast interviews.

Later, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), in New York, complained formally that U.S. forces interfered with and mistreated four non-embedded journalists. They were accused of spying and detained incommunicado without food for more that 48 hours.

But the most serious incident was the U.S. strikes, intentional according to Reporters Without Borders (RSF), against a hotel full of independent journalists and the office of the Al-Jazeera satellite network in Baghdad.

Cameramen Taras Protsyuk of Reuters and José Couso of Spain's Telecinco, were killed in the first attack on the Palestine Hotel. U.S. officials have stated that their troops were responding to sniper fire from the roof of the hotel. Eyewitnesses said they heard no gunfire coming from the building.

Embedded CNN journalist Walter Rodgers referred thus to the incident: ''It's called self-defence,'' he said, reporting from the mechanised U.S. cavalry unit he rode with.

Al-Jazeera reporter Taraq Ayyoub was killed in the second offensive and cameraman Zouhair al-Iraqi was injured. Moments later another explosion damaged the nearby office of Abu Dhabi TV. Al-Jazeera's office in Kabul was also targeted by U.S.-forces in November 2001.

The CPJ also suspects the attacks were deliberate.

In a letter of protest addressed to Rumsfeld, CPJ Acting Director Joel Simon says, ''The evidence suggests that the response of the U.S. forces was disproportionate and therefore violated international humanitarian law.''

So, what's next for U.S. journalism after Iraq?

''For the short term, it will be a press that is less likely to boldly cover issues that can be seen as critical of authority - issues like the disappearance of civil liberties in the name of national security, critical world opinion, unilaterialism in American foreign policy, the decline of diplomacy and the rise of military solutions to diplomatic problems, etc.,'' says Kovach.

''Because of the stunning success of the military action and the public's infatuation with the images of victory,'' he concludes, ''this is the future''.
0 Replies
 
cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Sun 13 Apr, 2003 10:41 pm
It'll never stick. The highest court in the land belongs to GWBush. c.i.
0 Replies
 
 

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