Reuters families demand US troops be tried over shooting

[April 09 2010]

The families of two Reuters employees killed in a US helicopter attack in the Iraqi capital Baghdad in 2007 on Thursday demanded justice, telling AFP the Americans responsible should stand trial.

“The truth came out and the whole world saw. The American pilot should be judged by international justice and we want compensation because the act left orphans,” said Safa Chmagh, whose brother Saeed Chmagh, a Reuters driver, died.

“He (the pilot) killed unarmed innocent people, among them a photographer whose camera was very visible. On top of that when they evacuated the wounded they opened fire again,” said Safa, whose brother was 44 when killed.

Nameer Nooraddin Hussein, a 22-year-old photographer with Reuters, was also shot to death.

Graphic footage of the attack, which killed several other people on the ground and wounded two children, was published on the Internet by Wikileaks, a website that publishes information obtained from whistleblowers.

The video included audio conversations between Apache helicopter pilots and controllers where the USmilitary identified the men in a Baghdadstreet in broad daylight as armed insurgents and asked for permission to open fire.

The footage showed the Reuters men and other Iraqis gunned down in the Ameen district of Baghdadin a hail of cannon fire from an Apache helicopter gunner.

Saeed Chmagh’s grieving son Salwan, 20, was deeply disturbed by the footage which was aired on Arab television channels and seen by more than four million people on the Internet.

“I want the American pilot who killed my father to be judged,” he exclaimed, while close to tears in the Chmagh family’s Baghdad home.

“Why did he do that? Were the victims not innocent? Were they not human beings? We want our father,” he said.

Samer Chmagh, the murdered Reuters driver’s second son, said he did not understand why the UShelicopter had opened fire.

“They were not members of a militia. Everybody saw from the pictures that they were journalists,” he said.

The father of Reuters photographer Hussein, speaking to AFP from the northern city of Mosul, also demanded justice and called for a tribunal in The Hague.

“The innocents were killed in cold blood,” said Nooraddin Hussein, 63.

“I was very sad when I saw the images but today at least the American people will know the troops of their army were pleased to kill people.” – (The Hindustan Times/AFP)