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Death of Spanish journalists in Iraq sparks protests
By Vicky Short
11 April 2003
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Journalists and broadcasters from Spains Telecinco
struck work on April 9 and held a lobby outside the American Embassy
to protest the killing of 37-year-old cameraman José Couso
on April 8 when American tanks shelled the Palestine Hotel in
Baghdad.
His colleagues took all their photographic equipment and pointed
it at the Embassy in a symbolic gesture. Many reporters, cameramen
and staff from other media outlets as well as the general public
joined them.
Cuosos death will intensify the bitter antiwar and anti-government
campaign in Spain. He is the second Spanish journalist to be killed
in Iraq. Though Julio Anguita Parrado was killed by an Iraqi missile
on April 7, he was the son of the ex-general secretary of the
Communist Party of Spain, Julio Anguita, a leading light in the
United Left (Izquierda UnidaIU) which opposes the war against
Iraq.
Parrado, aged 32, was a special war correspondent for El
Mundo and was embedded with the 3rd Infantry Division of the
US army at the communications centre 15 kilometres (nine miles)
south of Baghdad. The division was hit by an Iraqi missile that
also killed German journalist Christian Liebig, 35, and two US
soldiers.
The Cordoba City Council, which is governed by a coalition
of the IU and PSOE declared a day of mourning on April 8 and journalists
of the city where Parrado started his career called a rally in
his memory. Messages of condolence sent to the families and the
government take the opportunity to denounce the war and particularly
the support given to it by Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar.
It is revealing as to the extent of military press censorship
that while El Mundo described the attack on the 3rd Infantry
Divisions communications centre as the most devastating
individual offensive of all the missiles that Iraq has launched,
it was hardly reported by the US and British media.
The Spanish minister of defence instructed media outlets to
recommend to their reporters that they leave Iraq, but the other
war correspondent of El Mundo, Monica G. Prieto, wrote
an emotional letter defying the recommendation and saying she
is staying for the sake of Julio (Parrado) and José (Couso).
In part the letter reads:
In less than 24 hours I have lost two friends and colleagues
who were fighting to tell the truth.... We are beginning to wish
that Washington wins, because, unfortunately, that will be the
only way to end this horror soon. Then we can go and forget that
in the new wars civilians and journalists are the targets, that
fighting between armies disappeared centuries ago.
See Also:
US bombs Al-Jazeera center in Baghdad
[9 April 2003]
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