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03/04/07
Afghan journalists say U.S. soldiers deleted photos, video
after bomb attack and shootings
By AMIR SHAH
Associated Press Writer
KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) -- Afghan journalists covering the
aftermath of a suicide bomb attack and shooting in eastern
Afghanistan Sunday said U.S. troops deleted their photos and
video and warned them not to publish or air any images of
U.S. troops or a car where three Afghans were shot to death.
Afghan witnesses and gunshot victims said U.S. forces fired
on civilians in cars and on foot along at least a six-mile
stretch of road in Nangarhar province following a suicide
attack against the Marine convoy. The U.S. military said militants
also fired on American forces during the attack.
The U.S. military and Afghan officials said eight Afghans
died and 34 were wounded in the violence. One Marine was also
injured.
A freelance photographer working for The Associated Press
and a cameraman working for AP Television News said a U.S.
soldier deleted their photos and video showing a four-wheel
drive vehicle in which three people were shot to death about
100 yards from the suicide bombing. The AP plans to lodge
a protest with the American military.
The photographer, Rahmat Gul, said witnesses at the scene
told him the three had been shot to death by U.S. forces fleeing
the attack. The two AP freelancers arrived at the site about
a half hour after the suicide bombing, Gul said.
"When I went near the four-wheel drive, I saw the Americans
taking pictures of the same car, so I started taking pictures,"
Gul said. "Two soldiers with a translator came and said,
'Why are you taking pictures? You don't have permission.'"
It wasn't clear why the accredited journalists would need
permission to take photos of a civilian car on a public highway.
Gul said the U.S. troops took his camera, deleted his photos
and returned it to him. The journalists came across another
American, showed their identification cards, and he agreed
that they could take pictures.
A Western military official who asked not to be identified
because he was not authorized to release the information said
the troops were Marine Special Operations Forces, the Marine
Corps component created in February 2006 of the U.S. Special
Operations Command.
"The same soldier who took my camera came again and deleted
my photos," Gul said. "The soldier was very angry
... I told him, 'They gave us permission,' but he didn't listen."
Gul's new photos were also deleted, and the American, speaking
through a translator, warned him that he did not want to see
any AP photos published anywhere. The American also raised
his fist in anger as if he were going to hit him, but he did
not strike, Gul said.
Lt. Col. David Accetta, a U.S. military spokesman, said he
did not have any confirmed reports that coalition forces "have
been involved in confiscating cameras or deleting images."
Khanwali Kamran, a reporter for the Afghan channel Ariana
Television, was in a small group of journalists working alongside
Gul. Kamran said the American soldiers also deleted his footage.
"They warned me that if it is aired ... then, 'You will
face problems,'" Kamran said.
Taqiullah Taqi, a reporter for Afghanistan's largest television
station, Tolo TV, said Americans were using abusive language.
"According to the translator, they said, 'Delete them,
or we will delete you,'" Taqi said.
A freelance cameraman for AP Television News said that about
100 yards from the bomb site, a U.S. officer told him that
he could not go any closer to the scene but that he could
shoot footage. The cameraman asked not to be named for his
own safety.
"Then I started filming the suicide attack site, where
there was a body and U.S. soldiers, and farther away, there
was a four-wheel drive vehicle in which three people were
shot to death," he said.
As he was filming, he said, a U.S. soldier and translator
"ordered us not to move." The cameraman said they
were very angry and deleted any footage that included the
Americans, as well as part of an interview from a demonstration.
Hundreds of Afghans had gathered to protest the violence.
Reporters Without Borders condemned the actions of the U.S.
forces, saying they dealt with the press poorly.
"Why did the soldiers do it if they don't have anything
to hide? The situation is very tense in Afghanistan, and the
media should be able to report about it freely and safely,"
said Jean-Francois Julliard, a spokesman for the Paris-based
Reporters Without Borders.
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