Alive In Baghdad Correspondent Killed

by Jordan Yerman | December 15, 2007 at 02:23 pm
2266 views | 36 Recommendations | 10 comments

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This hasn't hit MSM yet, but Ali Shafeya Al-Moussawi, one of Alive in Baghdad's correspondents, was shot and killed in his home.

Ali lived in Habibya, it’s considered as a part of the Sadr city. On Friday the 14th at 11:30pm Baghdad time, Iraqi National Guard forces raided the street where Ali’s house is, one of the neighbors heard a gun firing after 15 minutes from the arrival of the Iraqi National Guard convoy to the street, the force left at 3:00am. His neighbors kept calling Ali’s phone and it was switched off all the time, so they called his cousin Amar because he lives one block away from where Ali lives.

Amar arrived in Ali’s house and found Ali shoot dead in the living room, Amar called the Iraqi Police and told them the story as he heard it from Ali’s neighbors. At 8:30 am Baghdad time the Iraqi Police took Ali’s body to the morgue, his two uncles received the body at 10:00am and they headed to Najaf to bury him.

Amar said the neighbor who lives in the front of his house was shot dead too during that raid, the guy’s name is Hussein and he is 26 years old. He was in his place along with his brother and nephew. The brother and the nephew disappeared after the convoy left.

The morgue report says that Ali took 31 bullets between the chest and the head and died immediately. He will be missed and remembered. His two brothers were killed in the Firdos Square bombing in 2005. He is survived by his mother and sister.

Alive in Baghdad is also a NowPublic contributor.

From AiB's Mission Statement:
"Above all, Alive in Baghdad is devoted to empowering Iraqi citizen journalists to share their stories with the world in a personal, candid and non-bureaucratic way. We endeavor to cut through the red tape and politics of corporate news and deliver the real stories, from real people, everyday."

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Jordan Yerman

31 bullets make this a somewhat suspicious death, in a region where various groups are not keen on honest reportage.

urbano411
urbano411
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 17:28 on December 15th, 2007

jordan,  Good stuff. The danger of truth is more then just a cautionary tale. Those that report it are in the crosshairs at all times.

PEP
PEP
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 18:05 on December 15th, 2007

jordan, thank you for getting the word to us. Good work, but a sad day.

Oftentimes, people forget that journalism can be a very, very risky business.

Isn't this the first loss of one of our own? Is there anything we can do for his family? Are they in need? 

Is it time to create a NowPublic honoring list (for active and deceased contributors) or even a memorial list for those contributors we lose?

 

 

 

0
Jordan Yerman

Yes, there is! The link in the story goes to an obit page, where they have details for donations for his family.

0
Jordan Yerman

Absolutely-- and what makes this situation even more incredible (and tragic) is that AiB are doing it for themselves, and not tied to any existing media giant.

0
PEP

Hi Jordan, right now the page isn't working. They must be getting a lot of hits.

Is there a way that we could contribute as a NP group, from us? Thanks. 

mtippett
mtippett
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 02:26 on December 16th, 2007


amet123
amet123
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 05:57 on December 16th, 2007

jordan, I like this story. It's good stuff.

Karen Hatter
Karen Hatter
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 06:37 on December 16th, 2007

 

ryan
ryan
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 18:11 on December 16th, 2007

jordan, a tragedy!

I've worked directly with the organization to coordinate the release of one of their correspondents when they were detained by coalition forces...they do tremendous work.

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urbano411
First Flagged at 5:28 PM, Dec 15, 2007 by urbano411
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