New York, April 1, 2003The
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) is pleased that four journalists,
who were last seen in Baghdad’s Palestine Hotel on March 24, are now safe
in Jordan.
Free-lance photographer Molly Bingham; Johan Rydeng Spanner, a free-lance
photographer with the Danish daily Jyllands Posten; and correspondent
Matthew McAllester and photographer Moises Saman, both with Newsday are
in Jordan, headed to Amman.
CPJ received word of Bingham’s release from her mother, who confirmed
that her daughter was safe and traveling with Spanner and the Newsday
journalists.
According to Newsday, McAllester told his editors, “We are fine.
We are well.” He said that Iraqi authorities handcuffed the journalists
and took them to a prison. “They were interrogated several times by Iraqi
intelligence officials who suspected they may have been American spies—something
[the journalists] adamantly denied,” reported Newsday.
According to the U.S. daily, which is based in Long Island, New York,
the journalists “were never physically mistreated or abused although the
conditions were harsh …[and] they heard and felt bombs exploding in Baghdad
throughout the night.”
Meanwhile, CPJ continues to investigate the whereabouts of ITV News cameraman
Fred Nerac and translator Hussein Othman, who were last seen in southern
Iraq on March 22, when their car reportedly came under fire from coalition
forces.

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