BAGHDAD, Iraq
-
Iraq's Interior
Ministry said
Thursday it had
formed a special
unit to monitor
news coverage
and vowed to
take legal
action against
journalists who
failed to
correct stories
the ministry
deemed to be
incorrect.
Brig. Gen.
Abdul-Karim
Khalaf,
spokesman for
the ministry,
said the purpose
of the special
monitoring unit
was to find
"fabricated and
false news that
hurts and gives
the Iraqis a
wrong picture
that the
security
situation is
very bad, when
the facts are
totally
different."
He said
offenders would
be notified and
asked to
"correct these
false reports on
their main news
programs. But if
they do not
change those
lying, false
stories, then we
will seek legal
action against
them."
Khalaf
explained the
news monitoring
unit at a weekly
Ministry of
Interior
briefing. As an
example, he
cited coverage
by The
Associated Press
of an attack
Nov. 24 on a
mosque in the
Hurriyah
district in
northwest
Baghdad.
The AP
reported that
six Sunni
Muslims there
were burned
alive during the
attack. The
story quoted
witnesses and
police Capt.
Jamil Hussein.
Khalaf said
the ministry had
no one on its
staff by the
name of Jamil
Hussein.
"Maybe he
wore an MOI
(Ministry of
Interior)
uniform and gave
a different name
to the reporter
for money,"
Khalaf said.
AP Executive
Editor Kathleen
Carroll rejected
the accusation.
"The implication
that we may have
given money to
the captain is
false. The AP
does not pay for
information,"
she said.
Khalaf said
the ministry had
dispatched a
team to the
Hurriyah
neighborhood and
to the morgue
but found no
witnesses or
evidence of
burned bodies.
The spokesman
said the
ministry had a
large public
relations staff
and said they
should be
contacted by the
media to "get
real, true
news."
U.S. military
had no comment
on the
immolations on
the day of the
attack but
subsequently
issued a
statement,
citing the Iraqi
army as saying
it had found
nothing to
substantiate the
report.
U.S. Navy Lt.
Michael B. Dean,
a public affairs
officer for the
multi-national
force, later
demanded that
the story be
retracted
because he said
police Capt.
Jamil Hussein
"is not a
Baghdad police
officer or an
MOI employee."
His
allegations were
checked with the
AP reporter, who
had been in
routine contact
for more than
two years with
Hussein, in some
cases sitting in
his office in
the Yarmouk
police station
in west Baghdad.
Hussein wore a
police uniform
during the
face-to-face
meetings.
Hussein
confirmed the
burning story on
three separate
occasions. AP
reporters also
went to the
neighborhood and
found three
witnesses to the
immolations who
told nearly
identical
stories. Since
then more people
in the
neighborhood
have told about
the incident in
a similar
fashion.
Pictures of the
Mustafa mosque
where the
incident
occurred show
that it is badly
damaged by
explosives and
shows signs of
scorching from
fire.
Scrawled in
what appears to
be spray paint
on the mosque
compound wall is
the phrase
"blood wanted,"
which Iraqis say
has appeared on
many structures
in areas of
heavy
Shiite-Sunni
sectarian
conflict
throughout
Baghdad.
The phrase is
a warning to the
sect that is the
minority in the
neighborhood,
Sunnis in the
case of the
region around
the Mustafa
mosque in
Hurriyah, that
they will be
killed if they
return.
Under Saddam
Hussein's
regime, the
government
imposed
censorship on
local media and
severely
restricted
foreign media
coverage,
monitoring
transmissions
and sending
secret police to
follow
journalists.
Those who
violated the
rules were
expelled and in
some cases
jailed.