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by Staff Writers Baghdad (AFP) Jan 3, 2012
Reporters Without Borders on Tuesday sharply criticised what it said were a wave of violations of press freedoms during a "Black December" in Iraq's autonomous Kurdish region. The Paris-based watchdog pointed to more than 15 physical assaults on journalists, a dozen arrests or detentions, and the targeting of five media premises in the region during December, which it said "contravened legal and constitutional provisions". Reporters Without Borders (RSF) said that following a series of attacks on massage salons and alcohol shops in Zakho, a Kurdish town near Iraq's border with Turkey, several media offices were "torched". "Since then, the list of journalists being physically attacked or detained has steadily lengthened," it said. Most of the incidents cited occurred between December 2, when the Zakho violence erupted, and December 4. One incident, the arrest of a journalist, was reported on December 20. The watchdog welcomed the findings of a commission of enquiry established by Kurdish regional president Massud Barzani which said the violence was initially provoked by media supportive of the minority Kurdistan Islamic Union political party. The commission added, however, that groups close to Barzani's own Kurdistan Democratic Party had a role in the violence.
Prosecutor seeks drone images from deadly Turkish raid Turkish fighter jets killed the 35 Kurds during an operation last Wednesday the government admitted was a "blunder" that mistakenly hit civilians instead of Kurdish separatist guerrillas. Turkey's military command said it had ordered an attack on Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) militants after a spy drone spotted a group moving toward its sensitive south-eastern border under cover of darkness. A large-scale investigation into the incident is under way, said Anatolia, adding that the prosecutor's office in Sirnak province requested that the military send images taken by the unmanned aerial vehicles during the air raid. The prosecutor's office will also hear eyewitnesses from the region as part of the investigation, it said. Clashes between Kurdish rebels and the army have escalated in recent months. The Turkish military launched an operation on militant bases inside northern Iraq in October after a PKK attack killed 24 soldiers in the border town of Cukurca, the army's biggest loss since 1993. Hundreds of Kurds demonstrated Saturday in Diyarbakir, the main city of the majority Kurdish southeast, after police said two PKK members had been killed in a shootout. The PKK took up arms in southeastern Turkey in 1984, sparking a conflict that has claimed about 45,000 lives.
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