NEW YORK, March 6 - Italian Journalist Giuliana Sgrena became an icon in
Iraq, a role model of a caring journalist of conscience kidnapped by
parties unknown. Her plight mobilized the people of Italy with virtually
the whole county demanding her release.
In response, Italy dispatched an intelligence agent to find her and
negotiate her release. Miraculously, he did, but as fate would have it,
was killed by US soldier suspicious of his car, which raced through,
they say, a roadblock on its way to the airport. As bullets whizzed, he
protected her but gave up his.
This incident was originally described as an accident--but was it?
Turkishpress,com is reporting: "The companion of Giuliana Sgrena on
Saturday leveled serious accusations at US troops who fired at her
convoy as it was nearing Baghdad airport, saying the shooting had been
deliberate.
"The Americans and Italians knew about (her) car coming," Pier Scolari
said on leaving Rome's Celio military hospital where Sgrena is to
undergo surgery following her return home.
"They were 700 meters (yards) from the airport, which means that they
had passed all checkpoints.". ""Giuliana had information, and the US
military did not want her to survive," he added.
The chief editor of Sgrena's newspaper Il Manifesto Gabriele Polo
meanwhile branded Calipari's death a "murder".
As investigations into the circumstances continue, as indignation over
the event swells, journalists in Italy, especially her colleagues at il
Manifesto try to make sense of what happened. While the western media
reported the incident, accepting a US military version (which the NY
Times called "murky) the subtext and texture of her work and passion
goes largely unremarked upon.
Like many stories from Iraq, it is the story behind the story that goes
unreported.
"They have taught to us to be cold, "writes editor Gabriel Pole, "to
analyze the events, does not make us to be involved too much, for being
able to understand that that understood to us. And to try to change it.
But the world is made of persons. The facts, and even the history, are
our product: to the fine ones they are the outcome of bodies, of meat
and blood. It depends all on we, from what we make.
"From what it has made and it will make Giuliana Sgrena, from what it
has made but it will not be able more to make Nicholas Calipari. We
have recovered one similar. We have lost what he would have become our
friend."
And who is Giuliana. Her bio on the il Manifesto site explains:
A passionate expert of the Arab world she also dealt extensively with
issues and stories concerning the Horn of Africa, the Middle East and
the Maghreb. She covered for il manifesto the war in Afghanistan and
the various stages of the Iraqi conflict: she was in Baghdad during the
bombing of the city (and for this she was awarded by the President of
Italy the title of merit Cavaliere del Lavoro) and returned many times
again in order to describe the daily life of the Iraqis, documenting in
a professional manner the violence caused by the occupation of the
country.
"Together with her journalistic endeavors, Giuliana also devotes her
time to political issues. During the 1980's she was among the founders
of the peace movement: she was one of the speakers during the first
mass peace demonstration. "
And what of Nicola Calipari who gave his life so that she might live?
Valentino Parlato writes about him for Giuliana's newspaper:
"Nicola was a good person, loyal and generous. …He was a person that
inspired the maximum trust even to myself - consumed in so many
experiences -: if Nicola told me something, I believed him, I had no
doubts nor suspects; Nicola would not say something to hide something
else. And all of this was shown - to a careful eye - on his face, on
his smile, even on his mustache. And the eyes, which were full of words
and discreet.
"When at the check-point, before the Baghdad airport, from and American
car the first shots were fired against the car which was bringing
Giuliana towards the airplane which would have brought her back to
Italy, Nicola reacted humanly, immediately, for a reflex unwritten in
the rules of his service, he shielded Giuliana's body, and he was
killed…
"The joy for Giuliana is big, but even bigger is our pain, of all of us
of il manifesto, for the death of Nicola Calipari. He was not wounded
in service, but because he has been extremely generous, which we of il
manifesto cannot forget. To his two children and his wife a big hug
from all, really all of us."
THE APPEAL
Il Manifesto had issued an appeal to the kidnappers through Al Jazeera;
It is worth rereading because of its intelligence and sense of
compassion for Iraq:
" We ask of the men who have taken hostage our colleague, Giuliana
Sgrena, that they release her, not just as an act of generosity and of
mercy, but because Giuliana has always been a journalist who has
struggled for peace, and an ally of the Iraqi people. Her articles for
“Il Manifesto” have always expressed her opposition to the war and to
the occupation of Iraq by the Americans and by the international
coalition supporting them. Keeping her prisoner or harming her would
further damage the cause of Iraq and of the Iraqis in the eyes of the
world, fueling the arguments of those who want to impose “democracy”
or “freedom” on the Arab-Moslem world through war and violence.
“Il Manifesto” does not believe this and has never believed it. It is
an independent newspaper, peace loving by tradition, and it has always
opposed the “preventive wars” of George Bush. Through Giuliana’s eyes
our readers have seen the suffering that is daily inflicted on the
Iraqi people by the occupation, especially on the women and children,
suffering that she was determined to give voice to. It is a hard task,
amongst the proliferation of armaments that has the world in its grip,
and a task that a negative outcome for Giuliana would render yet more
difficult. Iraq would be still more alone.
"We therefore beg you to free Giuliana quickly, and in the name of the
Iraqi people who you wish to defend. Liberate one of the few voices
that are still free to describe the reality of Iraq for what it is, and
to oppose all forms of tyranny. "
Snatches of Guliana from her writings:
And what of Giuliana the journalist? Here are snatches from three of
her recent stories:
January 14: "The various embassies in Iraq, under American pressure,
had already instructed the journalists based there before the bombing
began on the 20th March 2003, to abandon camp. The injunction was
without effect, however, and the war was covered, for better or worse,
both by journalists having to submit to the control of the Iraqi
Ministry of Information, and by the embedded journalists censured by
the Pentagon. The further deterioration of the situation in Iraq has
made it even more difficult to provide information. The journalists are
hostages to all the perverse effects of the military occupation and the
privatization of the war.
"The hostility of the Iraqis to the military occupation has extended to
all foreigners present in the territory, contractors, journalists and
workers in humanitarian organizations. It's no longer enough to be
French, given the French opposition to the war and the occupation, to
get special treatment. And when a military occupation is dressed up as
a peace mission as the Italian government has done, it is hardly
surprising that subtle distinctions are not made.
29 December 2004: " 10,000 prisoners are still locked in American and
British prisons in Iraq. Most are Iraqis but there are also 350
foreigners. The figures were supplied by the Iraqi Minister of Human
Rights, Bakhtiar Amin. These numbers are in strong contrast with the
claims made some time ago by the Americans that the number of prisoners
had been considerably reduced after the releases following the scandal
of Abu Ghraib. Apparently the number of prisoners has been swelled by
numerous arrests of the survivors of the attacks on Samarra, Falluja
and Mosul.."
"26 November This month of November will be remembered as one of the
bloodiest of the occupation. Since the beginning of the month, which is
not yet finished, 109 Marines have been killed, a figure already
greater than that of the earlier attack on Fallujah, last April. But it
is above all the Iraqis who are paying the highest tribute : 2,085
killed in the attack according to the information given out by Iraqi
Security Minister Quassim Daud, without specifying the number of
civilians. The problem, says the Minister, is that of identification,
as many of the victims were not carrying documents. But many observers
say that the problem is that many of the bodies were unrecognizable
because they were so carbonized that the use of napalm was suspected.
"At the same time as the victim count from Fallujah, more disturbing
news is arriving from Oslo in the form of the report of an
investigation conducted by the Iraqi Health Ministry, in conjunction
with the Norwegian FAFO Institute for applied international studies and
UNDP, into the health of Iraqi children. The report states that since
the beginning of the war (March 2003) the number of Iraqi children
under the age of 5 suffering from acute malnutrition has doubled,
passing from 4 to 7.7%. Further, over 400,000 are suffering from
chronic diarrhea and protein deficit."
For more about Giuliana and her work:
http://216.239.37.104/translate_c?hl=en&u=http://www.ilmanifesto.it/
pag/sgrena/&prev=/
search%3Fq%3Dgiuliana%26hl%3Den%26lr%3D%26client%3Dsafari%26rls%3Den-us
JOURNALISTS STILL AT RISK
And now back to the issue of journalists in Iraq. Believe it of not,
statistically, journalists were ten times more likely to die in Iraq
than soldiers.
No TV networks to my knowledge have investigated the charges of the US
targeting of journalists there made by Eason Jordan the CNN news
executive who resigned when the mighty wrath of the right side of the
blogosphere, in effect, silenced him.
Many reported on his demise, none on his concerns.
A journalist interviewed in my film WMD who worked with Eason writes:
"I suppose when a corporation that owes its very existence to you
refuses to stand up for you...then its time to move on."
" never thought I would see the day when a news executive simply states
that he knows of 10 (and well documented) incidents in which
journalists have been targeted by US forces. He also had tried to bring
attention to the four journos (three locals from Reuters and one from
NBC) who were arrested and tortured by US forces in Fallujah. I was
stunned when the faux journos aka as bloggers began to tear apart Eason
instead of looking into his charges (they were sparked by Barney
Frank's comments that dead journos were just collateral damage)
'Anyone who knows him or has benefited by his absolute unshakeable
dedication to journo safety is unshaken by the tiny tempest. CNN and
the journalistic community is poorer for the experience.'
Guliana is free, recovering but alive. The media is still not free.
The Iraq war continues in this month that marks its second anniversary.
News Dissector Danny Schechter is the "blogger in-chief of Mediachannel.org. His film WMD (Weapons of Mass Deception) has just
been released on DVD. For information, visit www.wmdthefilm.com Write; David@wmdthefilm.com
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