International News Safety Institute

12 October 2006

Ahmad

Incident

Abdul-Rahim Nasrallah al-Shimari, Ali Jabber, Noufel al-Shimari, Sami Nasrallah al-Shimari, Maher, Ahmad, Hassan, and Unknown

Cause of death

Shooting

Details

The cold-blooded execution by masked gunmen of 11 employees of a fledgling satellite TV channel in Baghdad on 12 October was the deadliest single assault on the press in Iraq since the U.S.-led invasion in March 2003.

Gunmen in at least five vehicles drove up to Al-Shaabiya television in the eastern district of Zayouna around 7 a.m., Reuters reported. They burst into the station’s offices and executed 11 people and wounded two. Al-Shaabiya has not yet gone on the air and has only run test transmissions.

Executive manager Hassan Kamil told Reuters that the station had no political agenda and that the staff had been a mix of Sunnis, Shiites, and Kurds.

The station had not been threatened previously.

According to news reports, the channel still aims to launch after the end of the Muslim month of Ramadan in late October. Kamil said some of the gunmen wore police uniforms, and all were masked. According to news reports the gunmen’s cars resembled police vehicles.

A local press freedom group, The Journalistic Freedoms Observatory, named the dead as chairman and general manager Abdul-Rahim Nasrallah al-Shimari and his bodyguard, Ali Jabber; deputy general manager Noufel al-Shimari; presenters Thaker al-Shouwili and Ahmad Sha’ban; administrative manager Sami Nasrallah al-Shimari; video mixer Hussein Ali; and three guards identified only by their first names: Maher, Ahmad and Hassan. The station’s generator operator, whose name was not available, was also killed. A source at Al-Shaabiya confirmed the names. Program manager Mushtak al-Ma’mouri and news chief Muhammad Kathem were taken to the hospital with multiple gunshot wounds.

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