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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mephisto who wrote (3288)3/13/2002 5:41:21 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 15516
 
Photographer killed in hail of
Israeli tank fire


" It was a tragedy many observers had long feared because Israeli
soldiers in the occupied territories frequently fire at foreign
journalists, knowing that they are unlikely to face any serious
consequences or rigorous investigation."

By Phil Reeves in Jerusalem

news.independent.co.uk

14 March 2002

Israel's armed forces killed an Italian photographer yesterday and
narrowly missed a TV correspondent in a clearly marked car, who
was saved by his flak jacket, adding another entry to a fattening
dossier of attacks on journalists trying to cover Israel's activities in
the occupied territories.

The events occurred during the Israeli army's takeover of Ramallah
in the West Bank. The operation - which Israel claims is to root out
Palestinian "terrorism"- comprises the largest military offensive by
Israel since 1982.

Witnesses said Raffaele Ciriello, 42, a highly regarded freelance
photographer on assignment for the Italian daily newspaper Corriere
della Sera, was shot dead when soldiers in an Israeli tank opened
fire on him without warning from 150 yards away, using a heavy
machine-gun.

It was a tragedy many observers had long feared because Israeli
soldiers in the occupied territories frequently fire at foreign
journalists, knowing that they are unlikely to face any serious
consequences or rigorous investigation.


The Israeli army said it "regretted" Mr Ciriello's death and was
conducting an investigation, an announcement that is unlikely to
comfort his family, employers, or friends. Many previous inquiries
into cases of Israeli soldiers shooting journalists have dragged on
for more than a year, and ended with a whitewash.


Mr Ciriello worked for 10 years in trouble spots, including Kosovo,
Bosnia, and Afghanistan and had his own website displaying his
work. He was killed at about 9.30am in the centre of Ramallah. A
colleague who was with him, Amedeo Ricucci, said they were
following Palestinian gunmen when an Israeli tank appeared from
around the corner.

He said soldiers on the tank fired a machine-gun without warning,
striking Mr Ciriello in the stomach.
"Suddenly a tank appeared from
a corner and it opened fire," Mr Ricucci said.

In a separate incident in Ramallah, Tareq Abdel Jaber, an Egyptian
TV correspondent, said Israeli soldiers fired at least five shots at his
car, clearly marked with big TV signs.
He said one bullet hit him in
the right side but was stopped by his flak jacket.

Yesterday's bloodshed came 24 hours after the Israeli army fired for
15 minutes into a hotel being used by journalists in Ramallah. The
army justified that assault - in which seven shots were fired at a
camera belonging to the American ABC network - by claiming it
was returning fire from a gunman. The hotel's occupants said there
was no gunman. Later in the day, soldiers also fired at the tyres of
a taxi carrying British and American journalists.

According to the journalists' organisation, Reporters Without
Borders, there have been 40 cases since the start of the Palestinian
intifada in which journalists, mostly foreign, have been injured by
bullets. The organisation's investigations found the Israeli armed
forces were responsible in the majority of cases.


Those findings conflicted with those of Israel's military. After
investigations into a batch of cases in the early months of the
intifada, the army issued a report saying it found none of its troops
was to blame, except in one case.

Mr Ciriello's death is the second for Corriere della Sera in less than
six months. One of its reporters, Maria Grazia Cutuli, was killed
with three other journalists in an ambush in Afghanistan in
November.

news.independent.co.uk