Rabu, 20 April 2011

The Malaysian Insider :: World

The Malaysian Insider :: World


‘Restrepo’ director Tim Hetherington killed in Libya

Posted: 20 Apr 2011 05:14 PM PDT

Hetherington (centre) works at a rally in the rebel stronghold of Benghazi in eastern Libya, March 25, 2011. — Reuters pic

MISRATA, April 21 — Two photojournalists — Oscar-nominated filmmaker Tim Hetherington and Getty photographer Chris Hondros — were killed yesterday after coming under fire in the besieged Libyan town of Misrata.

Hetherington, co-director of Afghan war documentary "Restrepo," and Hondros were among a group working together on Tripoli Street, a main thoroughfare and scene of fighting between rebels and forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi.

"It was quiet and we were trying to get away and then a mortar landed and we heard explosions," Spanish photographer Guillermo Cervera said.

Doctors first said that Hetherington had died while Hondros had suffered brain injuries. Getty Images later released a statement saying Hondros (left) had died of his injuries.

Hetherington, who won the 2007 World Press Photo of the Year award, co-directed with Sebastian Junger the 2010 documentary "Restrepo," which was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary.

His British family issued a statement saying they had learned of his death with great sadness and that he would be remembered "for his amazing images and his Academy Award nominated documentary 'Restrepo.'"

Hondros covered major conflicts including Kosovo, Angola, Sierra Leone, Lebanon, Afghanistan, Kashmir, the West Bank, Iraq and Liberia, according to his website. He received multiple awards including the 2005 Robert Capa gold medal. His work in Liberia earned him a Pulitzer Prize nomination.

"Chris never shied away from the front line having covered the world's major conflicts throughout his distinguished career and his work in Libya was no exception," Getty said.

The New York based Committee to Protect Journalists said two other journalists had already been killed covering the conflict.

Mohammed al-Nabbous, founder of the online Libya Al-Hurra TV, was killed by an unknown gunman as he was streaming live audio from a battle in Benghazi on March 19, the CPJ said in a statement. Cameraman Ali Hassan al-Jaber was shot when his Al Jazeera crew was ambushed near Benghazi on March 13.

In Washington, the White House press secretary said in a statement that the Libyan government and all governments across the world must take steps to protect journalists who "give a voice to those who would not otherwise be heard." — Reuters

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‘We will help you,’ Sarkozy tells Libyans

Posted: 20 Apr 2011 04:30 PM PDT

Rebel fighters take up positions at the front line along the western entrance of Ajdabiyah April 20, 2011. — Reuters pic

PARIS, April 21 — France promised Libyan rebels yesterday it would intensify air strikes on Muammar Gaddafi's forces and send military liaison officers to help them as fighting raged in Misrata, killing nine civilians.

Rebels said they fought Gaddafi's forces for control of a main road in the besieged port city of 300,000, the insurgents' last bastion in the west of the country where civil war erupted in February over demands for an end to Gaddafi's 41-year rule.

Seven Libyan civilians, a Ukrainian doctor and a British photojournalist were killed in the course of heavy fighting between pro-government troops and insurgents in Misrata yesterday, medical workers said.

Around 120 people were wounded, including the wife of the Ukrainian doctor who lost both of her legs, according to Khalid Abufalgha, a doctor on the Misrata medical committee that deals with civilian casualties.

Photojournalist Tim Hetherington, co-director of Oscar-nominated war documentary "Restrepo," died when a group including several photographers was caught in mortar fire. Another photographer was hospitalised in critical condition, doctors said.

A still image purports to show a bombardment of rebel-held Misrata. — Reuters pic

"Nato warplanes are flying over Misrata but I do not know if there are strikes," a rebel spokesman calling himself Abdelsalam said by telephone. "Nato has been inefficient in Misrata. Nato has completely failed to change things on the ground."

Libyan state television said later that four people were killed in a Nato air strike on "civilian and military targets" in the Bir al-Ghanam area southwest of the capital Tripoli. There were "losses in property and farmland," it said.

Lieutenant-General Charles Bouchard, commander of Nato's Libya operations, advised Libyan civilians to keep away from Gaddafi's forces to help Nato carry out effective air strikes.

Hundreds of people are believed to have been killed in Misrata, where aid groups say the humanitarian situation is worsening due to a lack of food and medical supplies.

Evidence surfaced yesterday that Gaddafi's government is dodging UN sanctions to import gasoline to western Libya using intermediaries who transfer the fuel between ships in Tunisia, a source with direct knowledge of the situation told Reuters.

One intermediary company, Hong Kong-based Champlink, previously unknown to the oil trading community, has sought a transaction for fuel delivery into Libya, according to a fax obtained by Reuters, and European oil traders said they had been approached by other such firms.

In Paris, French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who has spearheaded UN-backed Nato intervention, pledged stronger military action at his first meeting with the leader of the opposition Libyan National Council, Mustafa Abdel Jalil.

"We are indeed going to intensify the attacks and respond to this request from the national transition council," an official in the president's office said, quoting Sarkozy as telling Abdel Jalil: "We will help you."

He did not say how Nato-led forces planned to overcome the stalemate on the ground after the United States and several European allies declined last week to join ground strikes.

A French military sources said Sarkozy had won approval from Nato to carry out more air strikes and France had moved six fighter jets from Corsica to the southern Greek island of Crete, closer to Libya, for that purpose.

Italy, the former colonial power in Libya that has provided air bases for the Nato mission but says its own planes will not open fire, said it may send 10 military trainers as part of increased Western efforts to help the badly pressured rebels.

US President Barack Obama still opposes sending US ground troops to Libya, the White House said yesterday, but he supports a French and British move to dispatch military advisors to help rebels fighting Gaddafi.

Vice President Joe Biden insisted in an interview with the Financial Times that US strike aircraft, requested by France, were not needed to achieve the alliance's goal in Libya.

"If the Lord Almighty extricated the US out of Nato and dropped it on the planet of Mars so we were no longer participating, it is bizarre to suggest that Nato and the rest of the world lacks the capacity to deal with Libya — it does not," he was quoted as saying. "Occasionally other countries lack the will, but this is not about capacity," Biden said.

A rebel fighter flashes a victory sign near the western entrance of Ajdabiyah April 18, 2011. — Reuters pic

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has recommended US$25 million (RM75 million) in commodities and services for Libyan rebels that would not include weapons, the State Department said. Obama still must sign off on this provision of aid such as radios, body armour and halal ready-to-eat-meals, spokesman Mark Toner said.

Western officials say Nato is attacking only military targets consistent with the alliance's UN mandate to impose a no-fly zone and protect civilians from Gaddafi's forces.

Rebels want Nato to go much further and provide close air support so they can break a prolonged battlefield stalemate.

Abdel Jalil told reporters he had invited Sarkozy to pay a visit to the rebel-held eastern city of Benghazi to demonstrate France's support for ending Gaddafi's autocratic rule.

"I think that would be extremely important for the morale of the revolution," he said. French officials did not say if the president had accepted.

Gaddafi's son, Saif al-Islam, was quoted by Al Arabiya TV as saying the government would prevail over the rebels and a new constitution was ready for when the insurgency was vanquished.

"Libya will not go back to what it was," it quoted him as saying on Libyan state television. "The era of the first Jamahiriya (people's republic) is gone and a new draft constitution has been prepared."

The rebels say forces loyal to Gaddafi have been bombarding Misrata heavily over the last week. In signs of hardship, there are long queues for petrol and electricity has been cut so residents depend on generators. Thousands of stranded foreign migrant workers are awaiting rescue in the port area.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navi Pillay, said the Libyan government's reported use of cluster munitions and heavy weapons in Misrata may amount to a war crime under international law.

The government denies it is attacking civilians in Misrata.

France's decision to send up to 10 military advisors to work with the rebels came a day after Britain, the other main leader of the coalition, announced a similar move.

Government spokesman Francois Baroin stressed France had no intention of sending troops into Libya, where Western powers are struggling to break a deadlock in a two-month-old conflict.

The French officers are expected to advise rebel leaders on how to organise their ragtag forces, now struggling against Gaddafi's better-armed and -trained army. They will also liaise with Nato on the location of rebels and Gaddafi's troops.

Asked whether the dispatch of liaison officers amounted to "mission creep," military analyst Jean-Dominique Merchet said it was only a small team and they would not be training fighters but advising their senior officers.

"It's about putting a bit of organization into the rebel forces. It's the French and the British doing this, it's clear that Nato is not very keen, nor the Americans," he said.

Independent defence analyst Paul Beaver said the decision to send military advisers was stretching the UN resolution.

"But I think without it the rebels are going to be so disorganised that we will have a stalemate in what is almost a civil war now," Beaver said. — Reuters

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