IFJ Report on Safety of Journalists and Killing of Media Staff During the Iraq War

<center>IFJ Report on Iraq © October 2003 International Federation of Journalists</center>
<center><FONT COLOR="#FF0000">Justice Denied on the Road to Baghdad</FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">Safety of Journalists and the Killing of Media Staff During the Iraq War - October 2003</FONT></center>

The International Federation of Journalists has declared April 8th – the anniversary of the attack by United States military on a Baghdad hotel filled with foreign journalists – a day of mourning and protest over the killings of journalists during the Iraq war and the “abject failure” of the Pentagon to adequately explain why journalists died.

Two journalists, Taras Protsiuk working for Reuters and José Couso, a cameraman for the Spanish network Telecinco, were killed in the Palestine Hotel, which was hit the day before Baghdad fell. The attack provoked outrage among journalists and media groups when the US falsely claimed that troops had been fired on from the hotel and later when a secret US investigation cleared the military of any responsibility.

“The attack on the Palestine Hotel was a shameful incident made worse by US misinformation circulated after the event and the failure to take responsibility for this attack,” said Aidan White, IFJ General Secretary. “The families and colleagues of the victims demand justice and a proper explanation about what happened.”

For the rest of this statement click here: IFJ Press Statement - 5 February 2004