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International Media Group: 100 Journalists, Media Workers Killed In

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  • International Media Group: 100 Journalists, Media Workers Killed In

    INTERNATIONAL MEDIA GROUP: 100 JOURNALISTS, MEDIA WORKERS KILLED IN FIRST HALF OF 2007

    The Associated Press
    International Herald Tribune, France
    http://www.newssafety.com/casualties/2007.htm
    Jun e 29 2007

    BRUSSELS, Belgium: One hundred journalists and media workers were
    killed in the first six months of this year, putting 2007 on the path
    of becoming the deadliest year for the news media, the International
    News Safety Institute said Friday.

    The 100-mark was reached Tuesday in Iraq - the most dangerous country
    for the news media in modern times - with the killing Tuesday of
    Hamed Sarha, a 30-year veteran of the Iraqi national news agency who
    was shot by unidentified gunmen, a statement said.

    According to statistics compiled by the Brussels-based group,
    83 journalists and 17 other media professionals died covering news
    stories between Jan. 1 and June 26. This compares with 68 deaths at
    the same time last year.

    INSI - a coalition of media organizations, media freedom groups, unions
    and humanitarian campaigners dedicated to the safety of journalists
    and media staff - said 2006 was the worst year on record with a total
    of 168 murders and other work-related deaths among journalists and
    media professionals.

    "This is a shocking development," INSI director Rodney Pinder said.

    "We have never known such a high death toll halfway through a year,
    and we fear for what might be to come."

    According to the statistics, 72 of the casualties worldwide appear
    to have been murdered.

    In Iraq, a total of 22 journalists and support staff were murdered
    in the first six months of this year, while 14 others died in other
    conflict-related incidents, the statement said.

    "Democracy has even less chance of taking hold in Iraq while
    journalists are being slaughtered like this," Pinder said.

    After Iraq, the countries where most journalists were murdered in the
    first half of this year were Afghanistan (5), Haiti and Philippines,
    each with four dead, Somalia, Palestine and India (3) and Sri Lanka,
    Mexico and Brazil (2).

    The dead include some prominent cases such as Hrant Dink, an ethnic
    Armenian journalist and advocate of minority rights murdered in
    Istanbul, and Edward Chikombo, a cameraman who had filmed the injuries
    of Morgan Tsvangirai and other opposition activists at the hands of
    the Zimbabwe police.

    Also, Ajmal Naqshbandi, a translator for Italian reporter Daniele
    Mastrogiacomo, was beheaded by the Taliban after the Italian was
    released unharmed.
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