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| Title | Black December for Media Freedom in Iraqi Kurdistan |
| Publisher | Reporters Without Borders |
| Country | Iraq |
| Publication Date | 3 January 2012 |
| Cite as | Reporters Without Borders, Black December for Media Freedom in Iraqi Kurdistan, 3 January 2012, available at: http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/docid/4f06d9652.html [accessed 27 May 2012] |
| Disclaimer | This is not a UNHCR publication. UNHCR is not responsible for, nor does it necessarily endorse, its content. Any views expressed are solely those of the author or publisher and do not necessarily reflect those of UNHCR, the United Nations or its Member States. |
Reporters Without Borders roundly condemns a wave of media freedom violations in Iraqi Kurdistan during December, especially a series of arrests of journalists that were carried out in a completely illegal manner.
According to the latest tally:
It all started with a series of attacks on massage salons and shops selling alcohol in Zakho (a city on the northern border with sizeable religious and ethnic minorities) after Friday prayers on 2 December. That night, buildings belonging to the opposition Kurdistan Islamic Union (KIU) in Zakho were set on fire.
The headquarters of many news media were also torched. They include the satellite TV station Speda, Xabir TV and Xabir Radio, and the news website Kurdiu. All these media are affiliated to the KIU, which includes many journalists are among its members. Since then, the list of journalists being physically attacked or detained has steadily lengthened.
Reporters Without Borders voiced concern about the abuses in a 5 December press release, calling on the authorities to conduct thorough investigations in all the cities where incidents had occurred, especially Dohuk, Smel and Zakho.
Kurdistan’s president, Massoud Barzani, appointed a four-member commission (consisting of a parliamentarian, a KIU-member, and two non-Muslim religious representatives) on 4 December to investigate all the incidents in Zakho.
In its findings, released on 25 December, the commission said that pro-KIU media had provoked the attacks on the massage salons and shops selling alcohol, that the security services had been overwhelmed and unable to prevent the attacks or protect the premises of the news media, and that certain groups close to the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) - one of the two ruling parties in Kurdistan - had also had a role in the violence.
The commission finally called on the judicial authorities to look at the possibility of prosecuting those responsible.
Now that all the journalists have been released and some of the media have been able to resume operating out of the same premises, Reporters Without Borders reiterates its concern about all these deliberate media freedom violations, which contravened legal and constitutional provisions in effect in Iraq and the autonomous region of Kurdistan.
Reporters Without Borders welcomes the commission of enquiry’s findings and calls on the judicial authorities must do their job. At the same time, it urges the judicial authorities to make a clear distinction between the responsibility of the political parties involved, and the work of the journalists employed by media affiliated to these parties.
All the Xabir radio and TV journalists arrested on 3 December were released three days later, except Kashani and Ramazan. Three of them - Yasin, Nasradin and Salim - were summoned to a police station on 7 December and were taken from there to a detention centre controlled by the Asayesh (intelligence services). Yasin was released on 11 December. The other two were released on 15 December. All three had to pay 10 million dinars (660 euros) in bail. Kashani and Ramazan had to pay the same amount in bail when they were finally released on 26 December.
Abdallah Ahmad, a Speda TV cameraman, was arrested at his home in Zakho at around 7:30 p.m. on 20 December and was released seven days later after payment of 10 million Iraqi dinars (660 euros) in bail.
The journalists said they were mistreated during their periods in arbitrary detention.
On the night of 2 December
On 3 December
On 4 December
On the night of 2 December
Topics: Kurd, Political situation, Political parties, Persecution based on political opinion, Freedom of speech, Freedom of information, Freedom of expression,