New York, April 13, 2004The Committee to Protect Journalists
(CPJ) has learned that French journalist Alexandre Jordanov, with TV news
agency Capa Television, was abducted on Sunday, April 11, near Iraq's
capital, Baghdad.
Jordanov and his cameraman, Ivan Cerieix, were filming clashes between
U.S. troops and Iraqi insurgents after an attack on U.S. convoy. Ceriex,
who was taken captive by a group of insurgents, was released the next
morning.
Agence France-Presse cited a joint statement by Capa and French TV channel
Canal Plus reporting that the two journalists were in Iraq working on
a documentary film for Canal Plus, and that the men were separated when
they took cover during the fighting.
Reuters reported that Capa "had been in contact, through an intermediary,
with a group saying it had kidnapped Jourdanov [sic] but that the contacts
had not resulted in his release."
Other journalists still missing
Three missing Czech journalists believed to have been traveling together
from Baghdad to Amman, Jordan, on Sunday morningMichal Kubal and
cameraman Petr Klima, both with the public network Czech Television, and
Vit Pohanka, of the public station Czech Radioare also feared kidnapped.
The Associated Press reported today that Iraqi Minister of Culture Mofeed
Al-Jazaeri said that, according to information he has, the Czech journalists
are in good health and may be released tomorrow. According to press reports,
a taxi driver who was driving the journalists said they were kidnapped
by armed Iraqis on the road just outside Baghdad. The taxi driver was
not abducted.
Soichiro Koriyama, a freelance Japanese photographer on assignment for
the Tokyo-based Asahi Weekly, was kidnapped along with two Japanese
aid workers on April 8 by a group calling itself the Mujahideen Squadrons.
The group threatened to burn the three captives alive if Japan did not
remove its forces from Iraq in three days. The fate of the three Japanese
civilians is unknown.

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