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Sadrists condemn journalists'
kidnapping
Baghdad -
Radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr's office on Tuesday condemned
the kidnapping of two CBS journalists in the southern city of Basra,
while Iraqi police said an intensive search was under way for the
men.
Iraqi police and witnesses said the
kidnapping occurred Sunday morning when about eight masked gunmen
wielding machine guns stormed the Sultan Palace Hotel and seized a
British reporter and his Iraqi interpreter. A security official said
one man had been detained in connection with the kidnapping.
Basra, Iraq's second-largest city,
has seen fierce fighting between rival Shiite militias as part of a
power struggle in the oil-rich south.
The Sadrists were quick to distance
themselves from the disappearance of the journalists.
"We condemn the kidnappings of
journalists, and we demand the release of the British journalist and
the Iraqi interpreter," Harith al-Edhari, a director of al-Sadr's
office in Basra, told reporters. "Our office condemns such events
and we call on security forces to help in their release."
The U.S. television network CBS
said Monday that two journalists working for it were missing in
Basra, a predominantly Shiite city, 340 miles southeast of Baghdad.
An official in the Basra security
operations room, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of
security concerns, said authorities had launched an intensive search
and had arrested a man suspected of involvement in the kidnapping in
an overnight raid.
Police, meanwhile, had cordoned off
the hotel in central Basra as they combed the building for evidence.
CBS did not identify the
journalists but said all efforts were under way to find them. It
requested "that others do not speculate on the identities of those
involved" until more information was available.
"CBS News has been in touch with
the families and asks that their privacy be respected," the network
added in a brief statement from its headquarters in New York.
The British military turned over
responsibility for the southern province to Iraqis in December, but
maintains forces near Basra. The military deferred questions to
Britain's Foreign Office, which said only that it was looking into
the matter.
"We're aware that Western citizens
have been reported missing in Iraq, and it's a matter we're looking
into with some urgency," a Foreign Office spokeswoman said, speaking
anonymously in line with government policy.
In New York, the Committee to
Protect Journalists said it was "deeply concerned for the safety of
our colleagues, and hope they are located swiftly and able to resume
their important work covering this critical story."
CPJ
Executive Director Joel Simon said: "Iraq is the most dangerous
country in the world for journalists and the deadliest conflict for
the press in recent history. Journalists face incalculable risks in
order to bring us the news about what is happening on the ground
there." -- Associated
Press
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