Egyptian journalist shot in clashes dies
Al-Ahram says Ahmed Mohammed Mahmoud, 36, was taking pictures of clashes on the streets from the balcony of his home, not far from central Tahrir Square when he was "shot by a sniper" four days ago. It says in a report on its website that he died Friday in the hospital.
The paper says Mahmoud worked as a reporter for Al-Taawun, one of a number of newspapers put out by the Al-Ahram publishing house.
Tens of thousands of protesters have been massing in Tahrir Square since Jan. 25 demanding the ouster of President Hosni Mubarak.
THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.
PARIS (AP) — Al-Jazeera’s offices in Cairo were stormed and torched and its website hacked Friday, the Arab broadcaster said, as a top U.N. rights official called attacks on journalists "a blatant attempt to stifle news" about pro-democracy protest.
The Qatar-based television network Al-Jazeera said its Cairo office was burned along with the equipment inside it, and called the attack an attempt by Egypt’s regime or its supporters to hinder its coverage of the uprising in Egypt.
Many correspondents covering the bloody street fights in Egypt have suffered violent attacks: a Swedish journalist is recovering from being stabbed in the back, and Czech public television is withdrawing its TV crew from Egypt because of what it called "unprecedented" attacks on reporters.
"We’ve never seen anything like this. Not a single media outlet in Egypt today has escaped the violence," said Jean-Francois Juillard, the head of Paris-based media advocacy group Reporters Without Borders. "It’s totally impossible to work as a journalist in Egypt today."
CBS News said Friday its foreign correspondent, Lara Logan, and cameramen Don Lee and Max McClellan were released after being held for a day by the Egyptian military, and are headed back to the United States. Logan had been stationed in the northern town of Alexandria.
Al-Jazeera also said a banner advertisement on its Arabic-language site was taken down for more than two hours early Friday and replaced with a slogan reading "Together for the collapse of Egypt," which linked to a page criticizing the network.
"Our website has been under relentless attack since the onset of the uprisings in Egypt," a statement from Al-Jazeera said. "While the deliberate attacks this morning were an attempt to discredit us, we will continue our impartial and comprehensive coverage of these unprecedented events."
Last week, Egyptian authorities closed Al-Jazeera’s Cairo office, revoked the credentials of Al-Jazeera reporters and detained several of them for various periods.
The Committee to Protect Journalists, a New York-based media watchdog, said Thursday that it had recorded 24 detentions of journalists, 21 assaults and five cases in which equipment was taken away over a 24-hour period. Among those detained have been correspondents for The New York Times and Washington Post.
Foreign photographers reported attacks by supporters of President Hosni Mubarak near Tahrir Square in central Cairo, the focal point of increasingly violent mass demonstrations demanding the Egyptian leader step down after 30 years in power.
In Geneva, the U.N.’s high commissioner for human rights, Navi Pillay, called the detentions of journalists "clearly a blatant attempt to stifle news."
She said "one of the prime drivers of this chaos seems to have been the actions of Egypt’s security and intelligence services" and called for an end to violence and an investigation into whether it was planned.
Germany summoned the Egyptian ambassador to Berlin, Ramzy Ezzeldin Ramzy, to the Foreign Ministry to protest his government’s "unacceptable" use of violence against peaceful demonstrators and journalists, the ministry said.
Germany’s foreign minister, Guido Westerwelle, said it was "Egyptian security forces’ duty to protect peaceful demonstrators, foreign observers and journalists."
"Those who initiated those outbursts of violence, or initiate them from the background, have to be held to account, also by the judiciary," Westerwelle told reporters in Berlin, speaking alongside U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, who was visiting the German capital.
Rights groups have also been targeted.
Human Rights Watch said one of its researchers, Daniel Williams, has been missing since his detention Thursday morning by Egyptian security forces in Cairo. Another group, Amnesty International, also said two of its staff members were missing and are believed to be held by the military police following a raid Thursday on a Cairo law center.
Both organizations called for their workers’ immediate release.
Meanwhile, a Swedish TV reporter covering the protests was in serious condition at a Cairo hospital after being stabbed in the back on Thursday.
Speaking a day after the attack on reporter Bert Sundstrom of public broadcaster SVT, Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt urged the Egyptian authorities to "respect the journalists."
Reporters are "the eyes and the ears of the world at the moment," Reinfeldt said at a European Union summit in Brussels.
Denmark’s Foreign Minister Lene Espersen said she was "appalled" by reports about repeated attacks against international journalists.
"We have seen a pattern in the past week’s dramatic developments in Egypt where freedom of expression has been deliberately suppressed. We can in no way accept this," she said Friday.
Denmark’s TV2 channel on Thursday aired footage of an attack on veteran reporter Rasmus Tantholdt and his cameraman, Anders Brandt. The two were on their way to the Mediterranean city of Alexandria when they were stopped at a checkpoint and then chased by an angry, club-wielding mob. They sought shelter in a shop and are now safe in an Alexandria hotel, the station said.
Both Sweden and Denmark have beefed up the travel advisories for Egypt, advising their citizens against all travel to the country. Previously, both had urged their citizens to avoid nonessential travel.
In a statement, French Foreign Minister Michele Alliot-Marie condemned "the unacceptable incidents that have compromised the security" of journalists from French media outlets, including TF1, France 2, BFM and France 24 television channels and Le Monde newspaper.
Alliot-Marie said in a separate statement Friday, she was "especially worried about the fate of three French journalists and a researcher about whom French authorities have no news."
She said she contacted her Egyptian counterpart, Ahmed Aboul Gheit, and asked him to do everything he could to ensure that the four are located and released.
Even Russia — a country consistently rated as one of the world’s most dangerous for journalists — spoke out against the violence.
In a statement Friday, the Russian Foreign Ministry said "we consider the oppression of mass media representatives working within the law to be unacceptable."
On Thursday, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs denounced the "systematic targeting" of reporters covering the protests.
Two Fox News Channel journalists were severely beaten by a mob near Tahrir Square on Wednesday. Correspondent Greg Palkot and cameraman Olaf Wiig had retreated to a building, but someone threw a firebomb inside and the men were attacked as they rushed out, said Michael Clemente, Fox’s senior vice president for news.
Incident
Two killed, one injured in car crash in Azerbaijan's Ismayilli district
Father and two children drown in reservoir in Azerbaijan's Aghdam
Magnitude 3.2 earthquake strikes Azerbaijan's Imishli
Explosion in residential house in Baku leaves one dead, four injured - UPDATED
NEWS FEED
US-Iran negotiations reportedly set to resume June 11, will include nuclear talks
Armenia's Constitutional Court upholds parliamentary election results
Two killed, one injured in car crash in Azerbaijan's Ismayilli district
Istanbul-Mineralnye Vody flight declares emergency after takeoff
Pezeshkian persuaded Iran's Supreme Leader to agree to talks with the US - NYT
Father and two children drown in reservoir in Azerbaijan's Aghdam
Turkish Vice President praises Pakistan’s mediation role between the US and Iran
Nine killed, eight injured in Ukraine road collision
Magnitude 3.2 earthquake strikes Azerbaijan's Imishli
Explosion in residential house in Baku leaves one dead, four injured - UPDATED
U.S. Embassy: We welcomed illumination of Heydar Aliyev Center in colors of American flag with gratitude
The National Interest: Iran-US war highlights Azerbaijan's strategic role in the Middle Corridor
Ukraine launches massive drone attack on Moscow, Russia says
5.5-magnitude quake hits near coast of central Chile - GFZ
ADB: Expanding Baku Metro passenger capacity could cut carbon emissions by 70,000 tons annually
Trump says US gave Iran 'a week off' for funeral of Iran' late supreme leader amid stalled talks
President Ilham Aliyev: It is gratifying that Azerbaijan–United States relations have been developing successfully and along an upward trajectory
Azerbaijan MFA congratulates US on Independnece Day
President Ilham Aliyev: Today, Azerbaijan and Armenia live in peace and are building trade relations
CMO Chairman to visit Uzbekistan
President Ilham Aliyev congratulates Donald Trump on 250th anniversary of U.S. independence
Combined Arms Army holds the next training session with reservists - VIDEO
Russian bomb attack kills at least four in Ukraine's Sumy
St. Petersburg oil terminal reportedly struck by Ukrainian drones
Russia says it destroyed 389 Ukrainian drones overnight
Azerbaijan's Azeri Light crude rises by more than $1 on global market
Oil prices rise in global markets
French mine-clearing assets remain deployed in Persian Gulf, Macron says
Zelensky urges G7 and US to stop Russian strikes on Ukraine
Brazil's Bolsonaro to remain under house arrest
France and UK ready to deploy militaries to support transit in Strait of Hormuz
Police investigate a shopping mall shooting that left 2 dead in suburban Detroit
Death toll of Venezuela earthquakes rises to 2,645
Egyptian national team has reached the 1/8 finals of the World Cup
Trump pardoned six US citizens convicted under Biden administration
Lewis Hamilton eyes British Grand Prix Sprint victory
Workers protest Mercedes-Benz cost-cutting
Merz: Germany will take on more responsibility in security matters
Hungary greenlights another cluster in Ukraine's EU accession talks
40 people injured in bus accident in Türkiye
Assistant to Azerbaijani President congratulates US on occasion of Independence Day
Remains of Bahadur Kamalov, a martyr of the First Karabakh War, were buried in Kalbajar
Netanyahu and Trump speak, agree to meet "soon" in the US, Israel says
Azerbaijan’s Speaker attends farewell ceremony for Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei in Tehran-PHOTO
Court considers defendants' motions during appeal hearing of Armenian nationals
Missing First Karabakh War martyr Madina Babayeva laid to rest in Kalbajar 33 years later - PHOTO
Media: NATO summit to approve €140 billion military aid package for Ukraine
ADY discusses expansion of Railway Cooperation with Russia and Iran
ICDO Secretary General meets Sudan's foreign minister to discuss humanitarian cooperation
In riposte to Trump, Merz says Germany can defend its military spending push