Killing of three journalists in Afghanistan, Russia resonate at unveiling of memorial
By JAMEY KEATEN, Associated Press Writer
PARIS -- As the first European memorial to journalists killed on the job was inaugurated Saturday, word trickled in that two reporters had been shot to death in Afghanistan and another was killed in Russia.
The killings resonated as press advocacy group Reporters Without Borders and the northwest French town of Bayeux unveiled a memorial to some 2,000 journalists and other media workers killed in the line of duty around the world since World War II.
"We were expecting anything but this today ... three at once. You can imagine how people responded here," Robert Menard, president of Reporters Without Borders, said by telephone. "It shows how much such killings are everyday news."
Fifty-six journalists have been killed so far this year -- mainly in Iraq, Menard said.
Anna Politkovskaya, a Russian journalist known for her critical coverage of the war in Chechnya, was shot to death Saturday in the elevator of her Moscow apartment building in a killing prosecutors suspect could be connected to her investigative work.
Also Saturday, two German journalists with the national broadcaster Deutsche Welle were gunned down while traveling through northern Afghanistan.
Karen Fischer, 30, and Christian Struwe, 38, were conducting research for a documentary. They were shot while inside their tent as they camped outside a small town some 100 miles northwest of Kabul.
The memorial in Bayeux to slain journalists, said to be the first of its kind in Europe, features four white markers etched with the names of journalists, photographers, camera and sound technicians killed since 1944 -- when Allied troops liberated the town. Additional stones are to be added in coming months.
Relatives, friends or former colleagues wiped their eyes or laid bouquets on a well-sculpted lawn around the markers. Lebanese anchorwoman Giselle Khoury honored her late husband Samir Kassir, a journalist and critic of Syria's policy in Lebanon, who was killed by a car bomb last year.
The goal of the story comments section at NapaValleyRegister.com is to have an open, thought-provoking, civil community forum for all issues.
What gets your comment posted?
• Staying on topic
• Keeping your comment to 300 words or less
• Avoiding name-calling
• Addressing your comments to the message rather than the messenger
What gets your comment deleted?
• Personal attacks
• Derogatory remarks
• Name-calling of any sort
• Going off-topic
• Hate speech
• Racially-insensitive comments
• Implying guilt of a subject in a crime story before there is a court verdict
• Posting e-mail addresses
• Posting comments of a commercial nature
• POSTING WITH ALL CAPITAL LETTERS
• Linking multiple comments together with "to be continued..." to get around the 300 word limit.
The fine print
- Comments are either approved or denied. We do not edit comments.
- You are welcome to modify and resubmit a denied comment.
- Comments may take several hours to be posted.
- Comments posted are those of the writer, and do not necessarily reflect the opinion of NapaValleyRegister.com, its employees or its parent company.
- Do you have information on a story? Please go to our
virtual newsroom to send us a news tip.
- If you feel a posted comment has violated our guidelines, please contact
online@napanews.com or add a comment indicating you have an issue and our moderators will review the comment in question.