The mounting death toll of Algerian journalists. by Deborah Baldwin It's become a morbid kind of quiz game: How many journalists have been slain in Algeria since May 1993? How many different ways did they die? The tally of deaths climbed to at least 49 in mid-September, when a number of Algerian newspapers shut down for three days in protest against the violence. "In two years, the Algerian press has paid a frightening tribute to the struggle for freedom and democracy," the Algerian Newspaper Publishers Association declared. But the three-day strike, it said, "in no way signifies that the profession is giving up." The protest followed a violent outburst that took the lives of five media employees during six days in September. It is widely believed that they were victims of guerrilla attacks by militant Islamic fundamentalists who are waging civil war against the Algerian government, though fundamentalists have claimed responsibility for only a third of the attacks. On September 3, Brahim Garoui, a political cartoonist at the Algiers daily El Moujahid, a government-controlled newspaper, was found brutally murdered; Said Tazout, a reporter at the French-language newspaper Le Matin in Tizi-Ouzou, east of Algiers, was also shot and killed. The next day Yasmina Brikh, a journalist with an Algerian cultural radio program, was killed near her home in the eastern Algerian suburb of Eucalyptus. On September 8 gunmen shot journalist Said Brahimi and his wife, Radja, a TV technician, in their car about 75 kilometers east of Algiers. Several weeks elapsed before the October 3 assassination of Omar Ouartilian, editor of the Arabic daily Al Khabar, one of Algeria's more independent newspapers. Authorities blamed Muslim militants. Militants were also blamed for the October 1 slaughter of 18 civilians who were gunned down while riding a bus to a village market some 205 miles outside Algiers. Islamic fundamentalists hope to destroy the military-backed Algerian government and have targeted not only journalists, but also academics, artists, intellectuals and others who are viewed as potential opponents of Islamic fundamentalism. The extremists have vowed to step up their struggle as Algeria nears elections scheduled for November 16. On September 17 gunmen killed one of the independent candidates running for president against incumbent President Liamine Zeroual. Formerly part of France, Algeria fought a long and bloody war of independence that ended in 1962. It maintains ties to France, where a recent series of terrorist bombs also has been blamed on Muslim extremists. The violence in Algeria began to escalate in January 1992, after the government suspended elections rather than allow a fundamentalist Muslim takeover. Some 30,000 to 40,000 Algerians, most of them civilians, have since lost their lives in the conflict. Journalists have provided a high-profile target for the extremists. "This is a totally new situation, unprecedented," says Djallal Malti of Reporters Without Borders, a Paris-based organization that promotes freedom of the press. "That's why ifs so frightening." The reign of terror on the media began May 17, 1993, when Omar Belhouchet, director of the daily El Watan, spotted what he thought were his would-be assassins in the rearview mirror of his car shortly after dropping his kids off at school. He managed to speed away, narrowly escaping. Nine days later, after publishing an editorial condemning violence against intellectuals, novelist-journalist Tahar Djaout was shot and later died. He had been head of a newsweekly called Ruptures. As if to further underscore the mightiness of the sword over the pen, Mahfoud Boucebsi, a psychoanalyst, was stabbed to death, presumably by guerrillas, on June 15. The next victim was a sociologist, Mohammed Boukhobza, whose throat was cut June 22 as his bound children watched. TV journalist Rabah Zenati was killed outside his cousin's home in Algiers on August 3. Then a pediatrician, on October 10; then a poet, December 28; then an Australian broadcast journalist, February 1; and a school principal, February 27. December 4, 1994, was the day Said Mekbel died, the same day he wrote a poetic description of the typical journalist at Le Matin, where he was editor in chief. "That's him, the one who doesn't know what to do with his hands, other than his little writings," Mekbel wrote.A quasi-independent voice in a country where the government often exerts pressure on the media, Le Matin seems to be a particularly popular object of the guerrillas' wrath. On August 20 Ameur Ouagueni, head of the paper's international news section, was shot in Algiers and died the next day. Altogether the paper has lost ... |
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