New York, March 9, 2004The Committee to Protect
Journalists (CPJ) is concerned by today’s shooting by Israel Defense Forces
(IDF) of Palestinian photographer Saif Dahla in the West Bank city of
Jenin.
Two witnessesDahla’s brother, Reuters photographer Said Dahla and
Reuters cameraman Ali Samouditold CPJ that there were about half
a dozen journalists standing together on the sidewalk of a residential
neighborhood in Jenin, covering an Israeli incursion into the city in
the early afternoon when the shooting occurred.
Said Dahla and Samoudi said that Saif Dahla, who works for the Agence-France
Presse (AFP), was shot when a soldier in a tank about 20 meters (22 yards)
away fired a few rounds from a machine gun. One of the bullets, or shrapnel,
injured Saif Dahla in his left leg. The journalists said that prior to
the incident, Palestinian youths had been throwing stones at the tank,
but that when the shooting occurred, the area was quiet. Samoudi said
that gunfire exchanges between Israeli troops and Palestinian gunmen in
the city prior to the incident did not occur in the vicinity where the
journalists were working.
Both journalists said that they were clearly identifiable
as members of the press, wearing flak jackets, helmets, and marked clothing.
They also said that they had been working in the area for more than an
hour, adding that the Israeli soldiers in the tank that fired upon them
and in other vehicles that were in the vicinity had seen them working
the whole time.
According to the journalists, when Dahla was shot, they rushed him into
a nearby home, and an ambulance arrived later to take him to a local hospital.
Both journalists said that as they were moving Dahla into the house, another
burst of gunfire came from the tank.
Said Dahla told CPJ that his brother went home after being treated for
his wounds, which he said were not serious.
An Israeli army spokesperson, Major Sharon Feingold told CPJ that Israeli
troops entered Jenin to arrest a "senior terrorist," and that "there was
a massive exchange of gunfire, it seems as if an AFP photographer was
very lightly wounded." Feingold added that the soldiers involved in today’s
operation are being debriefed, and that the army is "trying to find out
if it was IDF gunfire that accidentally injured the photographer."

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