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Press
Releases
11/21/2007
Bilal Hussein's career nearly ended soon
after it began

By ROBERT H. REID
Associated Press Writer
BAGHDAD (AP) -- Bilal Hussein's career as a photojournalist
nearly ended soon after it began.
Hussein, who had been working for The Associated Press for
about three months, volunteered to stay in his native Fallujah
as U.S. forces prepared to assault the city to drive out Sunni
religious extremists.
It was a decision not taken lightly. Once known as the "city
of mosques," Fallujah had become the symbol of Sunni
Arab resistance to the Americans and their Iraqi allies.
Fallujah had become a place where car bombs were rigged, terror
attacks planned, and kidnap victims taken for their final
terrifying days before they were beheaded before video cameras.
As fighting escalated in November 2004, Hussein produced
images from inside the city _ including a picture of insurgents
firing on coalition forces that was to win him a share of
a Pulitzer Prize.
But he was unprepared for the fury of the American attack
and the bitter resistance mounted by al-Qaida in Iraq and
its Sunni allies. As fighting raged, he slipped out of the
city and made his way to the AP office in Baghdad, 45 miles
to the east.
"Destruction was everywhere. I saw people lying dead
in the streets, wounded were bleeding and there was no one
to come and help them," he said at the time. "There
was no medicine, water, no electricity nor food for days."
Hussein, who is unmarried, had decided to stay in Fallujah
because it was home and because he considered it an opportunity
to make a name for himself in his new career as a photojournalist.
Like many Iraqis of his generation, opportunities were limited,
especially after the collapse of Saddam Hussein's regime in
the 2003 American-led invasion.
He was born in Fallujah in 1971 _ one of 14 children _ to
a family that is part of the Dulaim tribe, the largest in
Anbar province.
His father, who remarried after his first wife died, owned
a shop that sold farm equipment and leather goods. Until his
death in 1981, the elder Hussein was a chief of a branch of
the Dulaim tribe.
Hussein's family also owned a small farm where they grew
fruits and vegetables. One of his brothers managed the farm
and another distributed produce to local stores.
Hussein became interested in photography as a boy and learned
to develop photos in a dark room which his uncle had set up
in his home.
But photography offered little chance for a career in Fallujah,
a Sunni industrial and agricultural city of about 350,000
people.
Instead of photography, he studied mechanics at the Technical
Institute in Fallujah and worked variously in a mobile phone
shop, grocery and an auto parts shop _ jobs which provided
a bit of income but few prospects for a long-term career.
As Fallujah was becoming a center of anti-American resistance,
journalists would visit the city regularly in 2003 and early
2004. They would seek out residents who could help them understand
the dynamics of a city falling under the control of Sunni
religious extremists.
Hussein's cheerful manner, his intelligence and his knowledge
of the city, where his family had lived for decades, made
him a sought-after figure.
When Fallujah became too dangerous even for many Iraqis,
Hussein and other locals were hired as photographers and tipsters.
Bitter fighting in 2004, however, left the city in ruins.
Tens of thousands of inhabitants fled. U.S. and Iraqi forces
imposed strict security. Extremists sought other towns and
cities as new bases of operations, including Ramadi, the capital
of Anbar.
With security deteriorating in Ramadi,
the AP asked Hussein to go there to report on the conflict.
It was in Ramadi that he was arrested on April 12, 2006.
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