|
01/05/07
AP employee found shot to death in
Iraq
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) -- The body of an Associated Press employee
was found shot in the back of the head Friday, six days after
he was last seen by his family leaving for work.
Ahmed Hadi Naji, 28, was the fourth AP staffer to die violently
in the Iraq war and the second AP employee killed in less
than a month. He had been a messenger and occasional cameraman
for the AP for 2 1/2 years.
"All of us at AP share the pain and grief being felt
by Ahmed's family and friends," said AP President and
CEO Tom Curley. "The situation for our journalists in
Iraq is unprecedented in AP's 161-year history of covering
wars and conflicts. The courage of our Iraqi colleagues and
their dedication to the story stand as an example to the world
of journalism's enduring value."
The circumstances of Naji's death were unclear. Dozens of
Iraqis are found slain almost every day in Baghdad, many believed
victims of sectarian death squads.
Naji's wife, Sahba'a Mudhar Khalil, reported him missing Dec.
30 when he did not return that evening. He had left home by
motorcycle in the Ashurta Al Khamsa District in southwest
Baghdad at 10:30 a.m., telling her he was going to the AP
office. Naji's body was found in a morgue.
In addition to his wife, Naji is survived by 4-month-old twins,
a boy, Zaid, and a girl, Rand.
The death came as colleagues were still mourning Aswan Ahmed
Lutfallah, 35, an AP cameraman who was shot to death by insurgents
while covering clashes Dec. 12 in Mosul. He was the second
AP journalist killed in that northern Iraqi city in less than
two years.
On April 23, 2005, cameraman Saleh Ibrahim was killed after
an explosion in Mosul. He was a father of five in his early
30s. AP photographer Mohammed Ibrahim was wounded. The circumstances
surrounding the death and injury are still unclear.
In 2004, Ismail Taher Mohsin, an AP driver, was ambushed by
gunmen and killed near his home in Baghdad.
Naji's death brings to 30 the number those who have lost their
lives on assignments for the AP since the news cooperative
was founded in 1846.
Before Naji's killing, Reporters Without Borders had recorded
at least 94 journalists killed in Iraq since the war started
nearly four years ago. Forty-five media assistants also have
been killed, according to the Paris-based advocacy group.
The Committee to Protect Journalists had put the figure at
92 journalists and 37 media support workers killed in Iraq.
|