November 14, 2003The Committee to Protect Journalists
(CPJ) is alarmed that unidentified Iraqi gunmen opened fire on a convoy
of Portuguese journalists and abducted one reporter today in southern
Iraq.
According to news reports and Portuguese editors who spoke with CPJ, the
gunmenwho were armed with Kalashnikov rifles and other small armsattempted
to intercept a three-jeep convoy carrying between six and nine Portuguese
journalists. The journalists had been heading north from the Kuwaiti border
to the southern Iraqi city of Basra when the attack occurred early this
morning.
When one of the jeeps refused to stop, the assailants
opened fire, wounding Maria João Ruela, a reporter with the television
channel Sociedade Independente de Comunicação (SIC). She
was shot in the buttocks, according to SIC foreign editor Martim Cabral,
who spoke with the journalist after the incident. Cabral said that the
attackers forced Ruela, her cameraman, Rui do O, and Carlos Raleiras,
a reporter for the Portuguese radio station TSF, out of their jeep. The
assailants then pushed Raleiras back into the jeep and sped away, he said.
Cabral said that Iraqi civilians later picked up the two journalists and
took them to Basra, where British medics treated Ruela for her injuries.
He said Ruela is in good condition.
The two other jeeps in the convoy eluded the attackers and fled to Basra
unharmed.
TSF's Web site reported that its editors managed to contact the journalist
on his cell phone, and that he told them he had been kidnapped but was
in good health.
TSF editor Nuno Saraiva told CPJ that station officials have been unable
to contact the journalist for several hours and fear that Raleiras' phone
battery has gone dead. Saraiva said that British forces are in contact
with the kidnappers, who have demanded a ransom, which some television
reports put at US$50,000.
TSF reported that British troops were deployed in the area in an attempt
to locate the missing journalist.
"We condemn this vicious assault, and we remain deeply concerned for the
welfare of our colleague," said CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper.

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