More

Journalists Targeted By Pro-Mubarak Forces In Egypt (VIDEO)

Christiane Amanpour Egypt

AP/The Huffington Post   First Posted: 02/02/11 06:11 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:30 PM ET

CAIRO -- Supporters of President Hosni Mubarak unleashed their fury on the media Wednesday, beating and threatening journalists who were covering fierce battles between pro- and anti-government crowds in central Cairo.

The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists accused the Egyptian government of orchestrating attacks on reporters in an attempt to deprive the world of independent information about the unrest. Paris-based Reporters Without Borders said "infiltrated policemen" had joined the assaults.

The Egyptian government denied the allegations.

CNN's Anderson Cooper was among those roughed up during a chaotic day in which Mubarak backers turned out in force for the first time in nine days of protests against his autocratic rule. Cooper said he, a producer and camera operator were set upon by people who began punching them and trying to break their camera.

"This is incredibly fast-moving," he said. "I've been in mobs before and I've been in riots, but I've never had it turn so quickly."

A journalist for Dubai-based Al-Arabiya television suffered a concussion, said media watchdog International Press Institute, citing Randa Abul-Azm, the station's bureau chief in Cairo.

("Democracy Now" producer Sharif Abdel Kouddous ran into a pro-Mubarak supporter who asked him if he was from Al-Jazeera or Al-Arabiya. He said he wasn't, and the man "responded that if he was working with those media outlets then... with a silent threatening gesture, crossed his fingers across his throat.")

The attacks appeared to reflect a pro-government view that many media outlets are sympathetic to protesters who want Mubarak to quit now rather than complete his term. On Tuesday night, Mubarak pledged not to run in elections later this year, and the army urged people to cease demonstrating.

In Wednesday's fighting, security forces did not intervene as thousands of people hurled stones and firebombs at each other for hours in and around the capital's Tahrir Square.

ABC's Christiane Amanpour said she could tell how the mood had changed from previous days after arriving in the square.

"You could smell it there," she said. "I just wondered what this was going to bode for the day."

She quickly found out: Thugs surrounded Amanpour and her crew shouting "We hate Americans" and "Go to hell," she said.

Amanpour decided to leave and her team got into a car. They were surrounded by a crowd that began rocking and pounding on the car, she said. Then someone threw a rock that shattered the windshield. The ABC team escaped unhurt.

Watch Amanpour receiving threats:


CBS reporter Mark Strassmann was also attacked:

This crowd of several hundred people were shouting loudly. There was clearly a sharp edge to the moment. My colleague was ahead of me when we were suddenly attacked. My colleague's small camera was in his pocket, but we stood out as Americans. People began pushing and shoving both of us, especially him. We've been in these situations enough to know you just try to get out as quickly as you can. But we were trapped. From behind, I saw him get pushed and shoved, and then three separate people ran up to throw punches at him as he ducked to get out of the melee. He later told me he had also been maced.

The Egyptian government has used "blanket censorship, intimidation, and today a series of deliberate attacks on journalists carried out by pro-government mobs," said Mohamed Abdel Dayem, Middle East and North Africa program coordinator at the Committee to Protect Journalists.

CPJ cited a report by independent daily Al-Shorouk in Cairo that men described as "plainclothes police" attacked their headquarters Wednesday, injuring two reporters and smashing a camera.

There were reported assaults on journalists for the BBC, Danish TV2 News and Swiss television. Two Associated Press correspondents were also roughed up.

"We strongly condemn these attacks and urge all parties to refrain from violence against journalists, local or foreign, who are simply trying to cover these demonstrations and clashes for the benefit of the public," Anthony Mills, press freedom manager for Vienna-based IPI, said in a statement.

"We are particularly concerned at suggestions that the attacks may have been linked to the security services," he said.

Government spokesman Magdy Rady said the assertion of state involvement in street clashes and attacks on reporters was a "fiction," and that the government welcomed objective coverage.

"It would help our purpose to have it as transparent as possible. We need your help," Rady said in an interview with The Associated Press. However, he said some media were not impartial and were "taking sides against Egypt."

Also Wednesday, Israeli media said four Israeli journalists in Egypt were arrested for violating the nightly curfew and working on tourist visas. Three were later released.

Israel Radio said one of the journalists worked for an Arabic-language portal based in the Israeli Arab town of Nazareth. Israel's Channel 2 TV denied reports that three of its reporters were among those detained.

Israel's Foreign Ministry released a statement calling on Israeli reporters in Egypt to "remain alert, act responsibly and follow the rules."

Egyptian state television reported Tuesday night that foreigners were caught distributing anti-Mubarak leaflets, in what appeared to be an effort to depict the protest movement as foreign-fueled. The government restored Internet service on Wednesday after having shut it down since last week, apparently to thwart protesters from organizing.

The website of Belgium's Le Soir newspaper said Belgian reporter Serge Dumont, whose real name is Maurice Sarfatti, was beaten Wednesday while covering a pro-Mubarak demonstration and taken away by unidentified people dressed as civilians.

The paper said Sarfatti had been able to call the paper to tell them he had been taken to a military post.

"They are saying I'm going to be taken to see security services. They accuse me of being a spy," the paper's website quoted him as saying.

Le Soir said Sarfatti uses the byline Serge Dumont and that he also works for Switzerland's Le Temps and France's La Voix du Nord newspapers.

A reporter for Turkey's Fox TV, his Egyptian cameraman and their driver were abducted by men with knives while filming protests Wednesday, but Egyptian police later rescued them, said Anatolia, a Turkish news agency.

There was no information on why the crew was held or circumstances surrounding their release.

A correspondent and a cameraman working for Russia's Zvezda television channel were detained by men in plainclothes and held overnight Tuesday, Anastasiya Popova of Vesti state television and radio said on air from Cairo.

"All of their equipment, cameras and all cassettes, were taken from them, they were taken to a house and blindfolded," Popova said. They were questioned, she said, "but today they took them to the outskirts of town and let them go without any explanation."

___

Associated Press writers David Bauder in New York, Angela Doland in Paris, Lynn Berry in Moscow, Suzan Fraser in Ankara, Turkey, and Mark Lavie in Jerusalem contributed to this report.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST MEDIA

CAIRO -- Supporters of President Hosni Mubarak unleashed their fury on the media Wednesday, beating and threatening journalists who were covering fierce battles between pro- and anti-government crowds...
CAIRO -- Supporters of President Hosni Mubarak unleashed their fury on the media Wednesday, beating and threatening journalists who were covering fierce battles between pro- and anti-government crowds...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 172
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (5 total)
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
aznurse
11:04 PM on 02/03/2011
maybe this will remind "Journalists" how important the media is. That finding true information is something that people need.
The coverage the media has given us about important events has been lacking. I hope they take privilege that our constitution gives them to heart and do a better job regarding our country when they get home.
I hope they all get home safely and I hope the people of Egypt prevail.
photo
LiberalOutlaw
Yes I am and NO you can't watch
06:55 PM on 02/03/2011
It used to boggle my mind that people would come here as tourists.

Any country with Sharia law is a country that I am going to give a very wide berth to, pyramids be damned.

Even before the uprising, if you were an American woman and got raped, there is absolutely nothing you could do. You could cry to the US embassy but they can't do anything either, because the law of the country you are in prevails. And in the case of Egypt, rape was and still is technically legal.....hopefully that will change.

I back the anti government protesters 100% and I hope they are successful in establishing a democracy.

I also hope that Obama also backs the protesters as he did for the people of Tunisia.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fineartgalaxy
Speaking from the heart, always.
03:22 PM on 02/03/2011
This was always a brutal regime. The only ones thinking otherwise were the last 6 presidential administrations that were sending an average of 1.3 billions per year to Mubarak. Pro-Mubarak citizens? Yeah, right. We are not blind, there is no pro-Mubarak citizens. These are Mubarak's government employees and otherwise trained precisely to do this. Mubarak has no intentions of ever leaving or conceding defeat. Hopefully I am wrong here and Egypt will have peace and prosperity very soon.
photo
dhinds
A Collection of Quotable Gems
03:15 PM on 02/03/2011
Is this what they do in Egypt instead of elections?
gardenkitty
Micro-bios for world peace!
02:38 PM on 02/03/2011
If these thugs are typical of Mubarek supporters, I hope they leave Egypt as soon as he does. The sooner the better.
Henri101
There is nothing more dangerous than sincere ignor
01:02 PM on 02/03/2011
The Egyptian Army are attempting to protect the journalists and staff from the angry mobs by taking them to secured places and they are attempting to distort the facts; maybe the army should leave them to the angry mobs.
photo
Greenchilistew
Just say "NO" to micro-bio!
01:06 PM on 02/03/2011
And you came to this conclusion how? How come the journalists who are being rounded up don't share your insightful assessment? If I were you, I'd cash those checks from Mubarak quickly before they close down his accounts.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Chaotician101
11:48 AM on 02/03/2011
Why are the press reporting Mubarak thugs, secret police, and government operatives as Mubarak supporters? They are government forces for suppression, murder, oppression, and destruction of the Egyptian people, and it is disingenuous to pretend they are some "common" peoples supporting this despot!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
aznurse
11:06 PM on 02/03/2011
I understood that with the term "Mubarak supporters."
11:21 AM on 02/03/2011
The demonstrators told Amanpour that she was a bad person and was biased. I would agree with that assessment. Her reporting is notoriously from an advocacy position which is one of the reasons CNN's ratings continued to fall while she was there. The people surrounding her were not "thugs" and maybe had she asked them for their side and not simply reported the party line that everyone in Egypt wants Mubarak out and the Muslim Brotherhood is a non violent social movement they would have been more tolerant of her.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
jennysez
11:16 AM on 02/03/2011
"Thugs surrounded Amanpour and her crew shouting "We hate Americans" and "Go to hell," she said."

Go Christiane! One of the last true journalists!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
R U Sirius
Retired educator, trainer; writer/editor
10:45 AM on 02/03/2011
Oh, NO THEY DITN! They better keep their grimy hands off Christiane!
08:56 AM on 02/03/2011
I wonder why Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck or Ann Coulter aren't there even Bill O'reilly is missing ,in fact have any of them done anything from Iraq or Afghanistan ?. What happened too we report you decide i want the biggest mouth's on Fox reporting something important in the world .
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
R U Sirius
Retired educator, trainer; writer/editor
10:46 AM on 02/03/2011
Uh...that would be like --journalism.
11:22 AM on 02/03/2011
Fox has several reporters there, none of the people you mentioned are reporters. They are commentators.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
shrimpdip
04:19 PM on 02/03/2011
Hmm, Dr. Maddow has done her show live from Iraq and from Afghanistan on several occasions. Wonder if Beck or O'Reilly will ever have the cojones.
08:22 AM on 02/03/2011
Angry mobs could care less about celebrity "journalists". If they get attacked or worse its their own fault. You think slaves sit in front of their flat screens watching AC360 or another american broadcast everynight.
08:04 AM on 02/03/2011
A CBC cameraman was badly beaten and escaped death until the reporter, Jean Francois Lepine, was able to convince some soldiers to intervene.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
danivers
"It's all BS, and it's bad for you." - G. Carlin
10:59 AM on 02/03/2011
...escaped death until the reporter convinced soldiers to kill him? That's no way to treat a cameraman.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Frustrated in PA
I am not frustrated, I am NOW disgusted
07:49 AM on 02/03/2011
Christiane handled the situation well, she knew they were going to get physical, she asked as many questions as she could and then led her team out. I must say, the pro-Mubarak people have not done themselves any help with their antics......reminds me of the bagger movement.
photo
studana51
Old and tired
07:00 AM on 02/03/2011
Amanpour has for decades been one of the only correspondents who understands the region and has the credibility to gain access to decision-makers whom are often uncomfortable with the fact that she will get the truth out of them. This woman has guts !