Reply
Sun 13 Apr, 2003 12:15 pm
Media Watchdog Concerned CNN Had Armed Guard
April 13 ?- PARIS (Reuters)
A media watchdog expressed concern on Sunday that a CNN team reporting from Iraq was traveling with an armed guard, saying it set a "dangerous precedent" that could imperil other journalists.
Reporters Sans Frontieres (RSF) made the comments after an incident in the northern Iraqi town of Tikrit in which a security guard hired by CNN fired his machinegun at a checkpoint when the CNN convoy came under gunfire.
"This behavior creates a dangerous precedent that could imperil all other reporters covering this conflict and others in the future," Robert Menard, RSF secretary general, said in a statement.
"There is a real risk that belligerents will believe all press vehicles are armed," he said, adding that the use of armed private security guards only increased the confusion between reporters and combatants in the conflict.
Media organizations have employed armed guards to protect premises in particularly dangerous places.
But a spokesman for the Paris-based media watchdog said it was unprecedented for journalists to travel with armed guards in conflict zones.
"To our knowledge, this is the first time press vehicles have traveled with armed security guards. It did not happen in the Balkans and it didn't occur in the first Gulf War," RSF spokesman Jean-Francois Julliard said.
"CNN appears to be going too far. This could come back to haunt them and other journalists. Journalists should not be traveling around with armed guards," he added.
CNN spokesman Matthew Firman said the team of reporters had come under small arms and automatic weapons fire from "relatively close range" either on the way in or out of Tikrit.
He said an Iraqi Kurd, hired as a security guard, had opened fire in response and been lightly wounded in the exchange. No one else was hurt.
Pointing to an earlier CNN report of an alleged assassination plot by Iraqi agents against its reporters in the north, Firman said locals had been hired in Kurdish-controlled Iraq to protect the station's journalists.
"Presumably we hire them to protect us, so if firing their weapon is required to protect themselves and our team, then that is appropriate," he said, in response to questions about CNN's policy of hiring armed guards.
"We only put our teams in situations in which we can do our best to ensure their safety. If it means hiring armed guards or security consultants we will do that. The security of our team is paramount," Firman said.
CNN Crew Criticism, journalist Brent Sadler responds
April 14, 2003 - Los Angeles Times
WAR WITH IRAQ CNN Crew Draws Fire and, Later, Criticism
By Josh Getlin, Times Staff Writer
NEW YORK -- It was a war correspondent's worst fear: CNN reporter Brent Sadler and his crew found themselves coming under heavy fire while in Tikrit on Sunday. An armed guard traveling with the team -- which had entered Saddam Hussein's hometown ahead of U.S. military forces -- fired back, and more than 100 rounds were exchanged before the reporters got away safely.
"OK, that's gunfire," Sadler said on live TV as the incident began. "We're just under attack. Under attack. We're OK, we're OK." Seconds later, as the CNN convoy sped away from the gunmen, he added with relief: "I think that's as far as we're going to push it today."
The dramatic footage was aired repeatedly through the day, but in the aftermath some media observers questioned whether the CNN team had crossed what has traditionally been a clear line between the military, which wages war, and journalists, who are supposed to be noncombatants.
Some critics suggested that reporters lose the presumption of neutrality if they become involved in combat. Yet others said journalists have increasingly come under fire in combat situations all over the world -- and that traveling with armed guards may be necessary.
"CNN appears to be going too far," Jean-Francois Julliard, a spokesman for Reporters Without Borders, said in a statement.
"This behavior creates a dangerous precedent.... There is a real risk now that belligerents will believe all press vehicles are armed," added Robert Menard, the group's secretary-general.
Julliard said Sunday's incident in the Iraqi city represented the first time that media vehicles had traveled in combat with private, armed security guards, noting that journalists did not employ such personal protection during the Balkan and the 1991 Persian Gulf wars.
They did, however, use armed guards during the conflict in Somalia, said Joel Campagna, the Mideast program coordinator for the Committee to Protect Journalists, which is based in New York.
"We take a more neutral stance on incidents like the one with CNN," he said. "Any time you carry arms or are traveling with armed guards you abandon the perception that you are a noncombatant, which is very important for journalists. But we would never say that you have to sacrifice your own security, if that is what a particular reporting situation calls for."
In Sadler's case, he added, "you clearly had to react quickly, to avoid getting killed." Twenty reporters were killed worldwide last year, most of whom were slain in reprisal attacks because of their work, Campagna noted. Although the committee has adopted a code of conduct for reporters in wartime, he added, it does not take a position on the use of armed guards.
Nine journalists have died in the Iraq war zone, including Washington Post columnist Michael Kelly. Another American, NBC correspondent David Bloom, died of a pulmonary embolism while reporting from there. A BBC translator also died.
"Historically, journalists have been able to respect the notion that they are not part of a conflict and will not be attacked," said Tom Rosenstiel, director of the Project for Excellence in Journalism.
"But those niceties are not being observed the way they used to be, and so the question of what's the right approach for a reporter gets muddled."
Sadler, whose team came under gunfire during the end of a two-hour report from Tikrit, was traveling in a two-vehicle convoy that had been marked with a "TV" sign, a well-known international symbol for the media, according to Matt Furman, a CNN spokesman.
Sadler and other so-called unilateral reporters -- who move about on their own and are not traveling with military forces -- have experienced weeks of dangerous reporting conditions in northern Iraq, Furman added.
"It clearly made sense to have our reporters protected in any way they can, with armed guards," Furman said. "But it's important to note that our reporters were not at any time armed themselves."
A Pentagon official said "it remains incredibly dangerous to be out there as a unilateral journalist."