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Press
Releases
11/24/2007
AP president and CEO says US plan to seek
criminal case against Iraqi photographer is unjust
By LILY HINDY
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) -- The U.S. military is making a mockery of
American democratic principles by bringing a criminal case
against an Associated Press photographer in Iraq without disclosing
the charges against him, AP President and CEO Tom Curley said
Saturday.
"This is a poor example — and not the first of
its kind — of the way our government honors the democratic
principles and values it says it wants to share with the Iraqi
people," Curley wrote in an opinion piece in The Washington
Post.
The U.S. military notified the AP last weekend that it intended
to submit a written complaint against Bilal Hussein that would
bring the case into the Iraqi justice system as early as Nov.
29.
Military officials have refused to disclose the content of
the complaint to the AP, despite repeated requests. Hussein's
lawyer will enter the case "blind," with no idea
of the evidence or charges, Curley wrote.
"In the 19 months since he was picked up, Bilal has not
been charged with any crime, although the military has sent
out a flurry of ever-changing claims. Every claim we've checked
out has proved to be false, overblown or microscopic in significance,"
said Curley.
Hussein, a 36-year-old native of Fallujah, was part of the
AP's Pulitzer Prize-winning photo team in 2005. He was detained
in Ramadi on April 12, 2006.
The U.S. military has alleged that Hussein had links to terrorist
groups but the AP's own intensive investigations of the case
have found no support for allegations that Hussein was anything
other than a working journalist in a war zone.
"We believe Bilal's crime was taking photographs the
U.S. government did not want its citizens to see. That he
was part of a team of AP photographers who had just won a
Pulitzer Prize for work in Iraq may have made Bilal even more
of a marked man," Curley wrote.
U.S. officials have asserted that Hussein offered to provide
false identification to a sniper seeking to evade U.S.-led
forces, that he possessed bomb-making equipment, and that
he took photographs that were synchronized with insurgent
blasts. The AP has found no corroboration of the accusations.
An American military spokesman in Iraq denied Saturday that
the U.S. was bringing charges against Hussein, saying instead
that it was merely presenting evidence to the Iraqis.
"It's not like our system," Maj. Bradford Leighton
said. "The evidence is presented to a judge and the judge
makes the decision whether the case goes forward."
He said that Curley's column reflected a "fundamental
misunderstanding of the Iraqi court system as well as the
detainee process."
Curley said the military has refused to answer questions from
Hussein's attorney, former federal prosecutor Paul Gardephe,
since announcing its intentions to seek a case against him.
He also said Gardephe learned that Hussein had been interrogated
recently for the first time in over 16 months, without his
lawyer present, presumably to gain evidence to be used against
him in the upcoming trial.
The military has leaked baseless allegations against Hussein
to friendly media outlets, Curley wrote, but it will not even
share the exact date of the hearing with the AP.
"How is Gardephe to defend Bilal? This affair makes a
mockery of the democratic principles of justice and the rule
of law that the United States says it is trying to help Iraq
establish," Curley wrote.
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