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U.S. Forces Kill Italian Agent after
Reporter Freed
Reuters
Friday 04 March 2005
Rome - U.S. forces fired at a car carrying
Italian reporter Giuliana Sgrena shortly after her liberation, killing
an Italian secret service agent and lightly wounding the journalist,
her newspaper said on Friday.
Gabriele Polo, the editor of Il Manifesto
newspaper, said Sgrena's car was fired on as it made its way to Baghdad
airport.
"This news which should have be a moment
of celebration, has been ruined by this fire fight," Polo told Sky Italia
television.
"An Italian agent has been killed by
an American bullet. A tragic demonstration which we never wanted that
everything that's happening in Iraq is completely senseless and mad,"
he added, struggling to fight back his tears.
The Italian President Carlo Azeglio
Ciampi sent his condolences to the family of the dead agent, who was
named by Il Manifesto's Polo as Nicola Calipari.
Sgrena was seized in the Iraqi capital
on Feb. 4 as she conducted interviews on the street near Baghdad University.
Go to Original
Italian Journalist Wounded
in Hostage Drama Recalls Her Ordeal
The Associated Press
Sunday 06 March 2005
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Freed hostage Giuliana Sgrena is helped out of
the plane at Ciampino airport in Rome on Saturday.
(Photo: By Patrick Hertzog, AFP) |
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ROME
(AP) - The freed Italian hostage wounded by American troops at a checkpoint
in Baghdad shortly after her release said in an article Sunday that
her Iraqi captors had warned her U.S. forces "might intervene."
Giuliana Sgrena, who writes for the
communist newspaper Il Manifesto, described how she was wounded and
Italian intelligence officer Nicola Calipari was killed as she was celebrating
her freedom on the way to the airport. The shooting Friday has fueled
anti-American sentiment in a country where people are deeply opposed
to U.S. policy in Iraq.
"I remember only fire," she said in
her article. "At that point a rain of fire and bullets came at us, forever
silencing the happy voices from a few minutes earlier."
Sgrena said the driver began shouting
that they were Italian, then "Nicola Calipari dove on top of me to protect
me and immediately, and I mean immediately, I felt his last breath as
he died on me."
Suddenly, she said, she remembered
her captors' warning her "to be careful because the Americans don't
want you to return."
The U.S. military said the Americans
used hand and arm signals, flashing white lights and fired warning shots
to get the car to stop. But in an interview Saturday with Italian La
7 TV, Sgrena said "there was no bright light, no signal." She said the
car was traveling at "regular speed."
Italian military officials said two
other agents were wounded, but U.S. officials said it was only one.
The agent who was killed, Calipari, had led negotiations for the journalist's
release.
Sgrena returned to Rome on Saturday
morning, looking haggard and with a blanket wrapped around her shoulders.
She walked unsteadily and was hooked up to an intravenous drip following
surgery to remove shrapnel from her shoulder.
She was taken to a Rome military hospital,
where she later met with Calipari's wife, the Italian news agency Apcom
said.
In her article, Sgrena wrote that her
captors warned her as she was about to be released not to signal her
presence to anyone, because "the Americans might intervene."
It was the happiest and also the most
dangerous moment," Sgrena wrote. "If we had run into someone, meaning
American troops, there would have been an exchange of fire, and my captors
were ready and they would have responded."
Sgrena said her captors then blindfolded
her and drove her to a location, where they made her get out of the
car.
That's when she first heard Calipari's
voice, she said.
"Don't worry, you're free," he told
her.
Neither Italian nor U.S. officials
gave details about how Sgrena managed to gain her freedom after a month
in the hands of Iraqi insurgents.
An Iraqi lawmaker, Youdaam Youssef
Kanna, told Belgian state TV Saturday evening that he had "nonofficial"
information a $1 million ransom was paid for Sgrena's release, Apcom
reported from Brussels.
The shooting came as a new blow to
the center-right government of Premier Silvio Berlusconi, a strong ally
of President Bush, who has assured him the shooting would be investigated.
Tens of thousands of Italians regularly demonstrated against the Iraq
war, and the Italian left - including Sgrena's newspaper - vigorously
opposed the conflict.
Berlusconi, President Carlo Azeglio
Ciampi and Il Manifesto director Gabriele Polo joined Calipari's family
at Rome's Ciampino Airport late Saturday before the agent's body was
flown in shortly before midnight.
The coffin with Calipari's body was
carried out of the military plane wrapped in an Italian flag and blessed
by a military priest and the agent's brother, a priest who serves on
a Vatican advisory body. Calipari's wife, mother and two children were
also present.
The coffin was loaded onto a hearse
and taken to the coroner's office in Rome. An autopsy began on Sunday,
according to news reports. The body was expected to lie in state at
Rome's Vittoriano monument, and a state funeral was planned for Monday.
Ciampi said he would award Calipari
with the gold medal of valor for his heroism.
"What happened yesterday in Baghdad
was a homicide," Polo told Apcom.
"The Americans must be firmly reminded
to respect human and civil rules," the ANSA news agency quoted Mirko
Tremaglia, minister for Italians abroad, as saying.
Sgrena was abducted Feb. 4 by gunmen
who blocked her car outside Baghdad University.
Go to Original
Journalists' Defence Panel
Seeks UN Probe into Sgrena Shooting
Agence France-Press
Saturday 05 March 2005
PARIS - An international journalists'
rights panel called on the United Nations to conduct an urgent probe
into how it came about that US soldiers opened fire in Baghdad on the
car carrying Italian correspondent Giuliana Sgrena.
A statement by Paris-based Reporters
sans frontieres (Reporters Without Borders) urged an investigation to
shed light on the circumstances in which the military fired on a vehicle
carrying the newly freed journalist, injuring Sgrena and killing an
Italian intelligence officer accompanying her.
"A thorough investigation must be quickly
carried out by the United Nations into this blunder with tragic consequences,"
Reporters Without Borders secretary-general Robert Menard said Saturday.
Sgrena, correspondent of the communist
daily Il Manifesto, returned to Rome Saturday, hours after US troops
wounded her in the shooting incident near Baghdad airport in which an
Italian intelligence officer was killed.
"It is clear that his enquiry cannot
be conducted just by the US army which in the past, especially in the
case of the Palestine Hotel shooting that killed two journalists, produced
reports aimed solely at exonerating the military," Menard said, adding:
"we demand to know the full truth about this distressing affair."
Reporters Without Borders had previously
voiced grave disappointment about the report of the US army's enquiry
into the April 2003 Palestine Hotel shooting, which cleared the coalition
forces of any fault or negligence.
Sgrena was kidnapped in Baghdad a month
ago.
The US military said the convoy had
ignored signals to stop, and that US soldiers had waved their hands
and arms, flashed white lights and fired warning shots in a failed attempt
to get the vehicle to stop |