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09/17/06
Associated
Press asks U.S. military to release or charge photographer
held in Iraq
New York -- The Associated Press today
asked the U.S. military in Iraq to release or charge an AP
photographer it has held in custody for more than five months.
AP said it was making the request public because all other
efforts to get photographer Bilal Hussein released have failed.
Hussein, 35, was taken into U.S. military custody on April
12, in Ramadi. He has been detained since then as a security
detainee. No charges have been brought against him.
“The Associated Press certainly appreciates the challenges
facing the U.S. military in Iraq. For more than five months,
we have tried to work with the military or its representatives,”
said Tom Curley, president and CEO of The Associated Press.
“Our review has convinced us that the matter is not
about a crime or threat to American security. It’s about
justice.”
“Bilal Hussein has been held in violation of Iraqi law
and in disregard to the Geneva Conventions. He must be charged
under the Iraqi system or released immediately.”
AP said its own examination had produced no evidence that
Hussein had done anything to justify holding him.
AP’s concern is that Hussein be treated fairly and have
appropriate access to justice, Curley said. AP has worked
continuously with both the U.S. military in Iraq and the U.S.
Embassy in Iraq to obtain his release or to have formal charges
brought against him. The Iraqi Ministry of Justice has also
filed a formal request that Hussein be released if there are
no grounds for charges against him.
Hussein has worked as a photographer for The Associated Press
since September 2004. He was one of an 11-member team awarded
the 2005 Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News Photography. A native
of Fallujah, he has been based in Ramadi since early 2005.
Contact: Linda Wagner and Jack Stokes, AP Corporate Communications,
212.621.1720
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