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09/17/06
U.S.
military holds AP photographer in Iraq 5 months without charges
By ROBERT TANNER
AP National Writer
The U.S. military in Iraq has imprisoned an Associated Press
photographer for five months, accusing him of being a security
threat but never filing charges or permitting a public hearing.
Military officials
said Bilal Hussein, an Iraqi citizen, was being held for "imperative
reasons of security" under United Nations resolutions.
AP executives said the news cooperative's review of Hussein's
work did not find anything to indicate inappropriate contact
with insurgents, and any evidence against him should be brought
to the Iraqi criminal justice system.
Hussein, 35, is a native of Fallujah who began work for the
AP in September 2004. He photographed events in Fallujah and
Ramadi until he was detained on April 12 of this year.
"We want the rule of law to prevail. He either needs
to be charged or released. Indefinite detention is not acceptable,"
said Tom Curley, AP's president and chief executive officer.
"We've come to the conclusion that this is unacceptable
under Iraqi law, or Geneva Conventions, or any military procedure."
Hussein is one of an estimated 14,000 people detained by the
U.S. military worldwide _ 13,000 of them in Iraq. They are
held in limbo where few are ever charged with a specific crime
or given a chance before any court or tribunal to argue for
their freedom.
In Hussein's case, the military has not provided any concrete
evidence to back up the vague allegations they have raised
about him, Curley and other AP executives said.
The military said Hussein was captured with two insurgents,
including Hamid Hamad Motib, an alleged leader of al-Qaida
in Iraq. "He has close relationships with persons known
to be responsible for kidnappings, smuggling, improvised explosive
device (IED) attacks and other attacks on coalition forces,"
according to a May 7 e-mail from U.S. Army Maj. Gen. Jack
Gardner, who oversees all coalition detainees in Iraq.
"The information available establishes that he has relationships
with insurgents and is afforded access to insurgent activities
outside the normal scope afforded to journalists conducting
legitimate activities," Gardner wrote to AP International
Editor John Daniszewski.
Hussein proclaims his innocence, according to his Iraqi lawyer,
Badie Arief Izzat, and believes he has been unfairly targeted
because his photos from Ramadi and Fallujah were deemed unwelcome
by the coalition forces.
That Hussein was captured at the same time as insurgents doesn't
make him one of them, said Kathleen Carroll, AP's executive
editor.
"Journalists have always had relationships with people
that others might find unsavory," she said. "We're
not in this to choose sides, we're to report what's going
on from all sides."
AP executives in New York and Baghdad have sought to persuade
U.S. officials to provide additional information about allegations
against Hussein and to have his case transferred to the Iraqi
criminal justice system. The AP contacted military leaders
in Iraq and the Pentagon, and later the U.S. ambassador to
Iraq, Zalmay Khalilzad.
The AP has worked quietly until now, believing that would
be the best approach. But with the U.S. military giving no
indication it would change its stance, the news cooperative
has decided to make public Hussein's imprisonment, hoping
the spotlight will bring attention to his case and that of
thousands of others now held in Iraq, Curley said.
One of Hussein's photos was part of a package of 20 photographs
that won a Pulitzer Prize for breaking news photography last
year. His contribution was an image of four insurgents in
Fallujah firing a mortar and small arms during the U.S.-led
offensive in the city in November 2004.
In what several AP editors described as a typical path for
locally hired staff in the midst of a conflict, Hussein, a
shopkeeper who sold cell phones and computers in Fallujah,
was hired in the city as a general helper because of his local
knowledge.
As the situation in Fallujah eroded in 2004, he expressed
a desire to become a photographer. Hussein was given training
and camera equipment and hired in September of that year as
a freelancer, paid on a per-picture basis, according to Santiago
Lyon, AP's director of photography. A month later, he was
put on a monthly retainer.
During the U.S.-led offensive in Fallujah in November 2004,
he stayed on after his family fled. "He had good access.
He was able to photograph not only the results of the attacks
on Fallujah, he was also able to photograph members of the
insurgency on occasion," Lyon said. "That was very
difficult to achieve at that time."
After fleeing later in the offensive, leaving his camera behind
in the rush to escape, Hussein arrived in Baghdad, where the
AP gave him a new camera. He then went to work in Ramadi which,
like Fallujah, has been a center of insurgent violence.
In its own effort to determine whether Hussein had gotten
too close the insurgency, the AP has reviewed his work record,
interviewed senior photo editors who worked on his images
and examined all 420 photographs in the news cooperative's
archives that were taken by Hussein, Lyon said.
The military in Iraq has frequently detained journalists who
arrive quickly at scenes of violence, accusing them of getting
advance notice from insurgents, Lyon said. But "that's
just good journalism. Getting to the event quickly is something
that characterizes good journalism anywhere in the world.
It does not indicate prior knowledge," he said.
Out of Hussein's body of work, only 37 photos show insurgents
or people who could be insurgents, Lyon said. "The vast
majority of the 420 images show the aftermath or the results
of the conflict -- blown up houses, wounded people, dead people,
street scenes," he said.
Only four photos show the wreckage of still-burning U.S. military
vehicles.
"Do we know absolutely everything about him, and what
he did before he joined us? No. Are we satisfied that what
he did since he joined us was appropriate for the level of
work we expected from him? Yes," Lyon said. "When
we reviewed the work he submitted to us, we found it appropriate
to what we'd asked him to do."
The AP does not knowingly hire combatants or anyone who is
part of a story, company executives said. But hiring competent
local staff in combat areas is vital to the news service,
because often only local people can pick their way around
the streets with a reasonable degree of safety.
"We want people who are not part of a story. Sometimes
it is a judgment call. If someone seems to be thuggish, or
like a fighter, you certainly wouldn't hire them," Daniszewski
said. After they are hired, their work is checked carefully
for signs of bias.
Lyon said every image from local photographers is always "thoroughly
checked and vetted" by experienced editors. "In
every case where there have been images of insurgents, questions
have been asked about circumstances under which the image
was taken, and what the image shows," he said.
Executives said it's not uncommon for AP news people to be
picked up by coalition forces and detained for hours, days
or occasionally weeks, but never this long. Several hundred
journalists in Iraq have been detained, some briefly and some
for several weeks, according to Scott Horton, a New York-based
lawyer hired by the AP to work on Hussein's case.
Horton also worked on behalf of an Iraqi cameraman employed
by CBS, Abdul Ameer Younis Hussein, who was detained for one
year before his case was sent to an Iraqi court on charges
of insurgent activity. He was acquitted for lack of evidence.
AP officials emphasized the military has not provided the
company concrete evidence of its claims against Bilal Hussein,
or provided him a chance to offer a defense.
"He's a Sunni Arab from a tribe in that area. I'm sure
he does know some nasty people. But is he a participant in
the insurgency? I don't think that's been proven," Daniszewski
said.
Information provided to the AP by the military to support
the continued detention hasn't withstood scrutiny, when it
could be checked, Daniszewski said.
For example, he said, the AP had been told that Hussein was
involved with the kidnapping of two Arab journalists in Ramadi.
But those journalists, tracked down by the AP, said Hussein
had helped them after they were released by their captors
without money or a vehicle in a dangerous part of Ramadi.
After a journalist acquaintance put them in touch with Hussein,
the photographer picked them up, gave them shelter and helped
get them out of town, they said.
The journalists said they had never been contacted by multinational
forces for their account.
Horton said the military has provided contradictory accounts
of whether Hussein himself was a U.S. target last April or
if he was caught up in a broader sweep.
The military said bomb-making materials were found in the
apartment where Hussein was captured but it never detailed
what those materials were. The military said he tested positive
for traces of explosives. Horton said that was virtually guaranteed
for anyone on the streets of Ramadi at that time.
Hussein has been a frequent target of conservative critics
on the Internet, who raised questions about his images months
before the military detained him. One blogger and author,
Michelle Malkin, wrote about Hussein's detention on the day
of his arrest, saying she'd been tipped by a military source.
Carroll said the role of journalists can be misconstrued and
make them a target of critics. But that criticism is misplaced,
she said.
"How can you know what a conflict is like if you're only
with one side of the combatants?" she said. "Journalism
doesn't work if we don't report and photograph all sides."
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