Press Get Death Threat From Iraqi Police
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| Mon, 09-13-2004 - 8:51pm |
In early August, Iraqi police threatened to kill every journalist working in the holy city of Najaf, where US forces were locked in a tense stand-off with Moqtada al-Sadr's Mehdi Army. After a series of veiled warnings to leave, two marked police cars pulled up at dusk outside the Sea of Najaf hotel on the outskirts of town, where Arab and Western journalists were staying. Ten uniformed policemen walked into the hotel and demanded that the al-Arabiya, Reuters and AP correspondents go with them. Journalists told them they were not there, but the policemen found and arrested Ahmed al-Salahih, the al-Arabiya correspondent, who the day before had been given a special exemption from the earlier eviction orders. A uniformed lieutenant then told the assembled journalists and hotel staff: "We are going to open fire on this hotel. I'm going to smash it all, kill you all, and I'm going to put four snipers to target anybody who goes out of the hotel. You have brought it upon yourselves."
