Monday, May 03, 2004

53 journalists who died covering the news in 2003 are added to Freedom Forum Journalists Memorial

Remarks by Tom Brokaw

ARLINGTON, Va. — The names of 53 journalists who died covering the news in 2003 were added today to the Freedom Forum Journalists Memorial in Arlington, Va., to commemorate World Press Freedom Day.

The memorial, located in Freedom Park, now pays tribute to 1,528 reporters, editors, photographers and broadcasters who died or were killed while on assignment. Tom Brokaw, anchor and managing editor of "NBC Nightly News," spoke at the 11 a.m. ceremony. Brokaw's NBC News colleague, David Bloom, is one of the 53 journalists who were remembered at the event.

Nineteen reporters died while covering the war in Iraq and another died in Germany a week after being wounded in Iraq in a grenade attack. Last year was the deadliest year for journalists covering conflict since World War II. By comparison, 17 journalists died in Cambodia in 1970, the deadliest year for journalists covering conflict in southeast Asia from 1955-1975; and 17 journalists died covering the Korean War (1950-1953).

"Covering a war from the battlefield is the single most challenging, dangerous and important assignment any journalist can undertake," said Brokaw. "It encompasses all of the issues and emotions that define the human condition and it requires great courage, compassion and a fierce commitment to the fundamental mission of all journalism: tell the truth. In this case, tell the truth while under fire."

In addition to Bloom, journalists who died in Iraq include Michael Kelly, Washington Post columnist and editor at large for The Atlantic Monthly and the first U.S. journalist to die in Iraq; Boston Globe reporter Elizabeth Neuffer; and Los Angeles Times correspondent Mark Fineman. Reporters from Spain, Argentina, Great Britain, Iraq, Germany and Australia also lost their lives covering the conflict in Iraq. Tareq Ayyoub, a Jordanian journalist who was killed April 8 when U.S. missiles hit the Baghdad offices of Qatar-based Aljazeera. A U.S. State Department spokesman called the bombing "a grave mistake."

Reporters also were killed last year while covering conflict in India, Indonesia and Israel. More than a dozen others were murdered for their reporting or commentary on government, politics, or crime in Brazil, Cambodia, Colombia, India, Nepal, the Philippines and Russia.

"From every corner of the globe, we see tragic reminders that reporting the news can be difficult, dangerous and deadly," said Joe Urschel, executive director and senior vice president of the Newseum.

Earlier, journalists and other newspeople participated in a 7 a.m. reading of the 1,475 names of journalists who died reporting the news from 1812 through 2002. Participating journalists included: Helen Thomas (Hearst News Service), Martin Turner (BBC), Rob Doherty (Reuters), Frank Smyth (Committee to Protect Journalists), Paul Rees (Centurion RAS LTD), Fred Sweets (AP), Peter Canellos (Boston Globe), Jill Colgan (Australian Broadcasting Company) and Doyle McManus (Los Angeles Times).

Journalists' names are added each year to the glass panels of the monument, which stands at the apex of Freedom Park, adjacent to the Newseum and Freedom Forum offices at 1101 Wilson Boulevard in Arlington, Va. A list of the names of the 53 journalists who died in 2003 is attached. To view a database listing the 1,528 memorialized journalists, their affiliations and the circumstances of their death, visit the Newseum online at www.newseum.org/memorial.

World Press Freedom Day was established by the U.N. General Assembly on Dec. 20, 1993, on a recommendation by the U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). Every year, May 3 is a day to remember and to celebrate the fundamental principles of press freedom. It serves as an occasion to inform citizens of press freedom violations — a reminder that in dozens of countries around the world, publications are censored, fined, suspended and closed down, while journalists, editors and publishers are harassed, attacked, detained and murdered.

Journalist Organization Died in
Luiz Antonio da Costa Epoca (Brazil) Brazil
Raphael Lima Pereira La Raça (Brazil) Brazil
Nicanor Linhares Batista Rádio Vale do Jaguaribe (Brazil) Brazil
William Paul Skirba KEYT-TV (United States) California (U.S.A.)
Chou Chetharith Ta Prum (Cambodia) Cambodia
Luis Eduardo Alfonso Parada Radio Meridiano 70 (Colombia) Colombia
Juan Carlos Benavides Arévalo Manantial Estereo (Colombia) Colombia
Guillermo Bravo Vega Alpevisión (Colombia) Colombia
Carlos Linares Freelance Colombia
Jaime Rengifo Radio Olímpica (Colombia) Colombia
Oscar Salazar Jaramillo Radio Sevilla (Colombia) Colombia
Jeremy Little Freelance Germany
Héctor Fernando Ramírez Noti-7 (Guatemala) Guatemala
Vikram Singh Bisht Asian News International (India) India
Parvaz Mohammad Sultan News and Feature Alliance (India) India
Ersa Siregar Rajawali Citra Televisi Indonesia
  (Indonesia)
Indonesia
Zahra Kazemi Freelance Iran
Julio Anguita Parrado El Mundo (Spain) Iraq
Tareq Ayyoub Aljazeera (Qatar) Iraq
David Bloom NBC News (United States) Iraq
Mariana Verónica Cabrera America TV (Argentina) Iraq
José Couso Telecinco (Spain) Iraq
Mazen Dana Reuters Television (Great Britain) Iraq
Mark Fineman Los Angeles Times (United States) Iraq
Kaveh Golestan BBC (Great Britain) Iraq
Ahmed Karim Kurdistan Television (Iraq) Iraq
Michael Kelly The Atlantic Monthly (United States) Iraq
Christian Liebig Focus (Germany) Iraq
Terry Lloyd ITN (Great Britain) Iraq
Paul Moran Australian Broadcasting Corp.
  (Australia)
Iraq
Elizabeth Neuffer The Boston Globe (United States) Iraq
Mario Podestá America TV (Argentina) Iraq
Taras Protsyuk Reuters (Great Britain) Iraq
Gaby Rado ITN (Great Britain) Iraq
Ahmed Shawkat Bilah Ittijah (Iraq) Iraq
Richard Wild Freelance Iraq
Nazeh Darwazeh Associated Press Television News
  (United States)
Israel
James Henry Miller Freelance Israel
James V. Walker The Clarion-Ledger (United States) Mississippi (U.S.A.)
Gyanendra Khadka Rastriya Samachar Samiti (Nepal) Nepal
Bonifacio Gregorio Dyaryo Banat (Philippines) Philippines
Apolinario Pobeda DWTI-AM (Philippines) Philippines
Juan Porras Pala Jr. DXGO Radio (Philippines) Philippines
Rico Ramírez DXSF Radio (Philippines) Philippines
Noel Villarante DZJV Radio and Laguna Score
  (Philippines)
Philippines
Galina Kovalskaya Yezhenedelny Zhurnal (Russia) Russia
Konstantin Kozar RTR Television (Russia) Russia
Yuliana Nakhodkina RTR Television (Russia) Russia
Aleksei Sidorov Togliattinskoye Obozreniye (Russia) Russia
Ruslan Yamalov Yezhenedelny Zhurnal (Russia) Russia
Abdullahi Madkeer DMC Radio (Somalia) Somalia
Edward Murphy The News Journal (United States) Virginia (U.S.A.)