British cameraman shot dead near Baghdad ( 2003-08-18 09:25) (Agencies)
A Reuters news agency
cameraman was shot and killed by American soldiers Sunday while filming outside
a Baghdad prison that was hit by a deadly mortar attack hours before.
Mazen Dana, 41, was filming outside Abu Ghraib prison in western Baghdad when
he was shot, Reuters said. A mortar attack there earlier Sunday killed six
prisoners and wounded about 60 others.
The videotape in Dana's camera showed two U.S. tanks coming toward him. Two
shots were fired, apparently from the tanks, and Dana fell to the ground. He was
taken away by a U.S. helicopter for treatment.
A U.S. military official said on condition of anonymity that Dana was shot by
American soldiers who saw him from a distance and mistook him for an Iraqi
guerrilla. When the soldiers came closer, they realized Dana was a journalist,
the official said.
"Mazen was one of Reuters' finest cameramen and we are devastated by his
loss. He was a brave and an award winning journalist who had worked in many of
the world's hotspots," Stephen Jukes, Reuters' global head of news, said in a
statement.
"He was committed to covering the story wherever it was and he was an
inspiration to friends and colleagues at Reuters and throughout the industry."
Dana's death brings to 17 the number of journalists killed in Iraq since
the war started March 20.
An outspoken critic of the Israeli government's treatment of journalists,
Dana, a Palestinian, was honored by the Committee to Protect Journalists with an
International Press Freedom Award in November 2001 for his work covering
conflict in his hometown of Hebron in the West Bank. He was shot at least three
times in 2000, according to the citation on the group's Web site.
"Words and images are a public trust and for this reason I will continue with
my work regardless of the hardships, even if it costs me my life," Dana said
after accepting the award.