User:Crtew/Assassination of Saif Talal and Hassan Al-Anbaki

Assassination of Saif Talal and Hassan Al-Anbaki is about the political murder of Saif Talal, (January 12, 2016), and Hassan Al-Anbaki, (January 12, 2016), both Iraqis, were journalists for an independent Iraqi television news station, Al Sharqiya (The Eastern One), in Erbil, Iraq. Saif Talal was a correspondent while Hassan Al-Anbaki was Talal’s colleague and cameraman. Talal and Anbaki were killed by gunmen in Baqubah, Diyala province, Iraq January 12, 2016 while returning from a news investigation. The investigation was of a suicide bomber attack in Baqubah, Iraq on January 12, 2016.


Biographical

edit

Delete these instructions after filling in personal details about the journalist. What do you know about this person's life outside of career and death? In most cases, you don't need a great amount of detail. Delete these instructions when you have completed the section about the person's career: Provide any career details and dates. Give background and any examples of important work. Don't go into any death details here.

Saif Talal

edit

Personal: Saif Talal was a citizen of Iraq and was married to his wife and had one child. Talal enjoyed spending the summers in Amman, Jordan.

Career: Saif Talal worked as a reporter for the television news station, Al Sharqiya until his death.

Saif Talal
DiedJanuary 12, 2016
Baqubah, Iraq
Cause of deathMurdered by gunmen
NationalityIraqi
OccupationJournalist/Reporter
Years activeJanuary 2014-January 2016
EmployerAl-Sharqiya TV
Childrenone child

Hassan Al-Anbaki

edit

Personal: Hassan Al-Anbaki was a citizen of Iraq and married to his wife and had one child.

Career: Hassan Al-Anbaki worked as a cameraman for the television news station, Al Sharqiya until his death.

Hassan Al-Anbaki
DiedJanuary 12, 2016
Baqubah, Iraq
Cause of deathMurdered by gunmen
NationalityIraqi
OccupationJournalist/Cameraman
Years activeJanuary 2014-January 2016
EmployerAl-Sharqiya TV
Childrenone child

Death

edit
 
 
Baghdad
 
Baqubah
The two were assassinated in Baqubah, Diyala province, Iraq, which is shown relative to the capital city Baghdad.

Saif Talal and Hassan Al-Anbaki were returning to the new station they were employed at, Al-Sharqiya, in Erbil, Iraq, from a reporting trip on the suicide bombing in Baqubah, Iraq that killed two people and wounded a police officer earlier in the day. Talal and Al-Anbaki were with Staff Lieutenant General Mizher al-Azzawi, the head of security command responsible for the province. The vehicle they were in fell behind the rest of the convoy, when unidentified gunmen intercepted their vehicle while passing a through a small village. Reports say the masked men forced them to get out the car and opened fire with Kalashnikov assault rifles killing both Talal and Al-Andbaki.

Context

edit

Iraq is currently one of the most dangerous countries in the world for journalists, especially those from the country, who are far more exposed to attacks than foreigners. Militia groups wield immense influence in the eastern province of Diyala, some of which have been repeatedly accused of serious abuses. According to Reporters Without Borders (RSF), eleven journalists were killed in Iraq in 2015, the most murdered of any other country. The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) reports that Iraq is the deadliest single country for journalists from 1992 to 2015, with 171 killed because of their work, almost double the second, which is Syria.

Impact

edit

Delete these instructions after completion: Why is this person important? In the lead, you suggested why this person is important, but now you want to give a more complete explanation. It is important to back this up with sources that are not world press freedom organizations, like the CPJ or RSF.

Reactions

edit

“We deplore the murder of these two Iraqi journalists. This shocking double murder must not go unpunished. Iraq is a minefield for journalists. We urge the authorities to conduct an independent investigation in order to solve this crime and bring those responsible to justice,” Alexandra El Khazen, the head of RSF's Middle East bureau, said in a statement.

In a statement published on its website on January 12 Al-Sharqiya accused "one of the militias on the loose" of carrying out the murder. The station, which had its license suspended by the Iraqi Commission of Media and Communications in 2013 for using a "sectarian tone" in its coverage of Sunni protests, did not accuse any specific militia or armed group of carrying out the attack.


See also

edit


TEMPORARY URL HOLDER

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ AFP. "Two Iraqi journalists shot dead by militiamen".
  2. ^ "Suicide bomber kills two, wounds senior police officer in east Iraq: police". Business Insider. 12 January 2016.
  3. ^ "Sunni mosques firebombed after attacks hit Iraqi Shias".
  4. ^ Roy Greenslade. "Two Iraqi TV journalists shot dead, the first of 2016". the Guardian.
  5. ^ "Two Iraqi journalists shot dead, intel officer wounded". The Indian Express. 12 January 2016.
  6. ^ "CPJ: Two Iraqi TV Station Journalists Killed".
  7. ^ MENAFN. "Two Iraqi journalists shot dead north of Baghdad".
  8. ^ "Luxemburger Wort". Wort.lu.
  9. ^ "Iraq: Possible War Crimes by Shia Militia". The Fifth Column.
  10. ^ "IS ignites sectarian tensions in multiple Iraq bombings". Middle East Eye.
  11. ^ "Iraqi government bans 10 satellite channels".
  12. ^ "نقابة الصحفيين العراقيين تندد بجريمة اغتيال اثنين من صحفيي قناة الشرقية - نقابة الصحفيين العراقيين". Iraq Journalists Syndicate.
  13. ^ The New Arab. "Popular Mobilisation militia 'kills' TV crew in Iraq's Diyala". alaraby.
  14. ^ http://sunnionline.us/english/2016/01/sunni-mosques-firebombed-after-attacks-hit-iraqi-shias/
  15. ^ "استشهاد مراسل ومصورالشرقية نيوز في ديالى".
  16. ^ "مقتل مراسل ومصور الشرقية في ديالى بهجوم مسلح شمال شرقي بعقوبة".
  17. ^ "KUNA :: France condemns killing of two Iraqi journalists 13/01/2016".
  18. ^ "DPB - January 13, 2016".
  19. ^ "UN Envoy strongly condemns assassination of Al-Sharqiya journalists".
  20. ^ "Director-General condemns murder of Iraqi journalists Saif Talal and Hassan al-Anbaki - United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization".
  21. ^ "RSF condemns murder of two journalists in Diyala province - Reporters Without Borders".
  22. ^ "Iraq: Possible War Crimes by Shia Militia". Human Rights Watch.
  23. ^ "Saif Talal". Committee to Protect Journalists. January 12, 2016.
  24. ^ "Hassan-al-Anbaki". Committee to Protect Journalists. January 12, 2016.
  25. ^ "Iraq suspends Al Jazeera broadcast operations".
edit