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US mowing civilian cars down on the highways; Journalist and his family among the victims
...the family...decided they would head out of Nassiriya for the town further south to the safe haven of Souk Al Shuyoukh.
Unfortunately, with the information blackout under which most Iraqis live...[they] had no idea that U.S. forces, sweeping north from Kuwait had control of that very highway that Monday night...the edgy Americans were shooting at everything on the stretch of road between the southern town and Nassiriya...from Basra. Jawad and his family, part of a huge convoy of cars carrying other civilians from Nassiriya were mowed down by the U.S. soldiers as they approached Souk Al Shuyoukh.
Unfortunately, with the information blackout under which most Iraqis live...[they] had no idea that U.S. forces, sweeping north from Kuwait had control of that very highway that Monday night...the edgy Americans were shooting at everything on the stretch of road between the southern town and Nassiriya...from Basra. Jawad and his family, part of a huge convoy of cars carrying other civilians from Nassiriya were mowed down by the U.S. soldiers as they approached Souk Al Shuyoukh.
Abu Dhabi TV's Hamid bereaved after bombing
Dubai |By Neena Gopal | 08-04-2003
The bombing of innocent civilians in Iraq was brought home with chilling effect last week when Abu Dhabi television's most famous face in Iraq nearly broke down. Live.
Shakir Hamid, paterfamilias to the Abu Dhabi television team in the Iraqi capital Baghdad, who has brought the war on Iraq into millions of viewers' living rooms, found that the war had hit closer to home than he could have ever imagined.
The fierce, relentless bombing by U.S. forces of the southern city of Nassiriya on which he was reporting had claimed three precious victims - Shakir's older brother Jawad and two of his brother's children, Hamid, 13, and 12-year-old Khulood. Shakir's sister-in-law was critically injured.
The couple's five other children who were in the car with them escaped but with their father dead, their mother's life hanging by a thread and their elder siblings gone, their fate must have been preying on Shakir's mind as he went live that night.
Jawad, 45, a virtual cripple from an earlier car accident and in need of constant medical care, had decided the night before that he and his family could not survive another night of U.S. bombing in their hometown of Nassiriya.
He and several other members of the family as well as close friends decided they would head out of Nassiriya for the town further south to the safe haven of Souk Al Shuyoukh.
Unfortunately, with the information blackout under which most Iraqis live, the older Hamid, who ran a second hand car business, had no idea that U.S. forces, sweeping north from Kuwait had control of that very highway that Monday night.
Or, that facing stiff resistance from Iraqi irregulars in Shuyoukh, the edgy Americans were shooting at everything on the stretch of road between the southern town and Nassiriya, where the Americans had been bogged down by President Saddam Hussain's elite Iraqi Republican Guard as they attempted the move north, from Basra.
Jawad and his family, part of a huge convoy of cars carrying other civilians from Nassiriya were mowed down by the U.S. soldiers as they approached Souk Al Shuyoukh.
"My brother and my nephew and niece died on the spot," said a tearful Imad, Shakir's younger brother and also a television journalist who arrived in Dubai from Baghdad a day before the war began.
He told Gulf News that his friends here had seen an ashen faced Shakir on television recount the story of the massacre, and did not have the heart to tell him (Imad) of his grievous loss at once.
"I tried to call my brother as soon as I found out, but it was virtually impossible to get through, so I had to settle for news of my older brother's death by watching the story being told by another brother on television," said Imad, who finally managed to get through to Baghdad the next day.
He found that Shakir knew little except what he was told by bitter and frightened survivors of that blitz. Their father, who suffered a recent heart attack and is recovering has not been told.
"He has now gone to take care of things in Nassiriya," Imad said of Shakir, who won fame in this region first as Al Jazeera's correspondent in Baghdad and now as Abu Dhabi television's main man in Iraq.
Shakir has turned the camera on the plight of hundreds of nameless Iraqis, maimed and brutalised by a war in which they are no more than hapless pawns, as he had done when he covered the earlier Gulf wars.
This particular list of dead and injured, however, is unlikely to be forgotten or forgiven.
Dubai |By Neena Gopal | 08-04-2003
The bombing of innocent civilians in Iraq was brought home with chilling effect last week when Abu Dhabi television's most famous face in Iraq nearly broke down. Live.
Shakir Hamid, paterfamilias to the Abu Dhabi television team in the Iraqi capital Baghdad, who has brought the war on Iraq into millions of viewers' living rooms, found that the war had hit closer to home than he could have ever imagined.
The fierce, relentless bombing by U.S. forces of the southern city of Nassiriya on which he was reporting had claimed three precious victims - Shakir's older brother Jawad and two of his brother's children, Hamid, 13, and 12-year-old Khulood. Shakir's sister-in-law was critically injured.
The couple's five other children who were in the car with them escaped but with their father dead, their mother's life hanging by a thread and their elder siblings gone, their fate must have been preying on Shakir's mind as he went live that night.
Jawad, 45, a virtual cripple from an earlier car accident and in need of constant medical care, had decided the night before that he and his family could not survive another night of U.S. bombing in their hometown of Nassiriya.
He and several other members of the family as well as close friends decided they would head out of Nassiriya for the town further south to the safe haven of Souk Al Shuyoukh.
Unfortunately, with the information blackout under which most Iraqis live, the older Hamid, who ran a second hand car business, had no idea that U.S. forces, sweeping north from Kuwait had control of that very highway that Monday night.
Or, that facing stiff resistance from Iraqi irregulars in Shuyoukh, the edgy Americans were shooting at everything on the stretch of road between the southern town and Nassiriya, where the Americans had been bogged down by President Saddam Hussain's elite Iraqi Republican Guard as they attempted the move north, from Basra.
Jawad and his family, part of a huge convoy of cars carrying other civilians from Nassiriya were mowed down by the U.S. soldiers as they approached Souk Al Shuyoukh.
"My brother and my nephew and niece died on the spot," said a tearful Imad, Shakir's younger brother and also a television journalist who arrived in Dubai from Baghdad a day before the war began.
He told Gulf News that his friends here had seen an ashen faced Shakir on television recount the story of the massacre, and did not have the heart to tell him (Imad) of his grievous loss at once.
"I tried to call my brother as soon as I found out, but it was virtually impossible to get through, so I had to settle for news of my older brother's death by watching the story being told by another brother on television," said Imad, who finally managed to get through to Baghdad the next day.
He found that Shakir knew little except what he was told by bitter and frightened survivors of that blitz. Their father, who suffered a recent heart attack and is recovering has not been told.
"He has now gone to take care of things in Nassiriya," Imad said of Shakir, who won fame in this region first as Al Jazeera's correspondent in Baghdad and now as Abu Dhabi television's main man in Iraq.
Shakir has turned the camera on the plight of hundreds of nameless Iraqis, maimed and brutalised by a war in which they are no more than hapless pawns, as he had done when he covered the earlier Gulf wars.
This particular list of dead and injured, however, is unlikely to be forgotten or forgiven.
For more information:
http://www.gulf-news.com/Articles/news.asp...
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On the highways it looks like the US Army and Air Force is shooting at or bombing anything out there.
This is a huge source of civilian deaths that goes unreported because most of these deaths occur on long stretches of highway which (thanks to the military) are extremely dangerous to traverse in order to report on the carnage -- in fact, no one is doing that because of the extreme danger.
Even Fox showed US troops firing at civilian vehicles. Even a car (like a brand new Land Rover) which turned around several hundred yards away from the tanks and tried to get away -- they strafed it killing everyone inside most likely (or at least injuring them but in a place where help cannot reach them). The Fox reporter called the occupants of these civilian vehicles "terrorists" and reported that his unit had killed 1000 Iraqis (were they these kind of "terrorists" -- that is, civilians in civilian vehicles who couldn't possibly put up a fight?).
This is a huge source of civilian deaths that goes unreported because most of these deaths occur on long stretches of highway which (thanks to the military) are extremely dangerous to traverse in order to report on the carnage -- in fact, no one is doing that because of the extreme danger.
Even Fox showed US troops firing at civilian vehicles. Even a car (like a brand new Land Rover) which turned around several hundred yards away from the tanks and tried to get away -- they strafed it killing everyone inside most likely (or at least injuring them but in a place where help cannot reach them). The Fox reporter called the occupants of these civilian vehicles "terrorists" and reported that his unit had killed 1000 Iraqis (were they these kind of "terrorists" -- that is, civilians in civilian vehicles who couldn't possibly put up a fight?).
US warplanes bomb Al Jazeera office, kill journalist
Al-Jazeera correspondent Tariq Ayoub was killed on Tuesday when two US missiles struck the Baghdad offices of the Qatar-based channel.
"We regret to inform you that our cameraman and correspondent Tariq Ayoub was killed this morning during the US missile strike on our Baghdad office," the Qatar-based channel said in a statement read out during its news bulletin.
Another cameraman, Zuheir Iraqi, was slightly wounded with shrapnel to his neck.
Ayoub giving his last report minutes before the US attack
They were both standing on the roof getting ready for a live broadcast amid intensifying bombardment of the city when the building was hit by two missiles, according to Tayseer Allouni, another correspondent.
Cameraman Iraqi came down bleeding, but Ayoub did not show up. “I ran up as the shells were still falling and crawled on the roof and shouted for Tariq, but he did not answer,” Allouni said.
“It seems that we have become a target,” Tayseer Allouni, Al-Jazeera correspondent said. Another of Jazeera's Baghdad correspondents Majed Abdel Hadi called the U.S. missile strike and Ayoub's death a "crime".
"I will not be objective about this because we have been dragged into this conflict," he said, visibly upset. "We were targeted because the Americans don't want the world to see the crimes they are committing against the Iraqi people."
Ayoub aged 35, was married with one daughter. He travelled to Baghdad only five days ago to join the Al-Jazeera team from the channel's Amman office where he had worked as a financial correspondent for three years. Originally from Palestine, he had also worked for the Jordan Times and the international news agency Associated Press.
Al-Jazeera correspondent Tariq Ayoub was killed on Tuesday when two US missiles struck the Baghdad offices of the Qatar-based channel.
"We regret to inform you that our cameraman and correspondent Tariq Ayoub was killed this morning during the US missile strike on our Baghdad office," the Qatar-based channel said in a statement read out during its news bulletin.
Another cameraman, Zuheir Iraqi, was slightly wounded with shrapnel to his neck.
Ayoub giving his last report minutes before the US attack
They were both standing on the roof getting ready for a live broadcast amid intensifying bombardment of the city when the building was hit by two missiles, according to Tayseer Allouni, another correspondent.
Cameraman Iraqi came down bleeding, but Ayoub did not show up. “I ran up as the shells were still falling and crawled on the roof and shouted for Tariq, but he did not answer,” Allouni said.
“It seems that we have become a target,” Tayseer Allouni, Al-Jazeera correspondent said. Another of Jazeera's Baghdad correspondents Majed Abdel Hadi called the U.S. missile strike and Ayoub's death a "crime".
"I will not be objective about this because we have been dragged into this conflict," he said, visibly upset. "We were targeted because the Americans don't want the world to see the crimes they are committing against the Iraqi people."
Ayoub aged 35, was married with one daughter. He travelled to Baghdad only five days ago to join the Al-Jazeera team from the channel's Amman office where he had worked as a financial correspondent for three years. Originally from Palestine, he had also worked for the Jordan Times and the international news agency Associated Press.
For more information:
http://english.aljazeera.net/topics/articl...
Comment: The US is trying to silence the Arab press because of their coverage of civilian casualties. The US government wants no witnesses to what's about to take place in Baghdad. They want the civilian victims to die quietly without a lot of publicity.
----------------------------------------------------------------
Story:
Abu Dhabi TV, Al Jazeera cars come under fire
Doha |WAM | 08-04-2003
The Arabic satellite channel Al Jazeera charged yesterday that U.S. forces fired on one of its vehicles near Baghdad.
Meanwhile, Abu Dhabi Television said that one of its vehicles carrying a crew came under fire in Baghdad. None of the journalists were wounded in the attack. They were returning from a press briefing by Mohammed Saeed Al Sahhaf, Iraqi Minister of Information.
The Qatar-based station said the car was bearing the Al Jazeera insignia when it "came under fire on a highway outside Baghdad". The driver reported the firing came from U.S. forces, the channel said in a statement.
"Al-Jazeera deplores this incident and reaffirms its commitment to carry out its media activities with its usual professionalism."
----------------------------------------------------------------
Story:
Abu Dhabi TV, Al Jazeera cars come under fire
Doha |WAM | 08-04-2003
The Arabic satellite channel Al Jazeera charged yesterday that U.S. forces fired on one of its vehicles near Baghdad.
Meanwhile, Abu Dhabi Television said that one of its vehicles carrying a crew came under fire in Baghdad. None of the journalists were wounded in the attack. They were returning from a press briefing by Mohammed Saeed Al Sahhaf, Iraqi Minister of Information.
The Qatar-based station said the car was bearing the Al Jazeera insignia when it "came under fire on a highway outside Baghdad". The driver reported the firing came from U.S. forces, the channel said in a statement.
"Al-Jazeera deplores this incident and reaffirms its commitment to carry out its media activities with its usual professionalism."
For more information:
http://www.gulf-news.com/Articles/news.asp...
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