Brutal assault on a journalist in Kurdistan, newspapers facing legal action

Reporters Without Borders today called for police to do their utmost to find those responsible for a “cowardly” physical attack on leading Iraqi Kurdish investigative journalist Nabaz Goran, who has just left Erbil, capital of Iraqi Kurdistan, to seek refugee in Sulaymaniyah to the east.

The 32-year-old editor of the independent Kurdish-language bi-monthly Jehan (World) (http://www.jehan-press.com/) was set upon by unknown assailants and brutally battered about the face and head as he was leaving his office in the Iskan district of the Erbil, on 29 October.

“I had just come out of the office, when three men unknown to me approached me and asked me if I was Nabaz Goran. I replied that I was and they then attacked me. One of them was armed with a blunt metal object which he used to hit me on the head and face while the two others rained punches on me. They did not stop insulting my mother and my sisters”, he told Reporters Without Borders, speaking with difficulty because of pain from his injuries (see photos).


Goran believed his attackers to be from Kurdish Democratic Party (KDP). He made a formal complaint to the police, but told the worldwide press freedom organisation, “I am not under any illusions, the police are in the pocket of the KDP”, adding that he never wanted to see the city again.

“Nabaz Goran is one of the most prominent investigative journalists in Iraqi Kurdistan. This assault on him demonstrates the huge difficulties journalists like him have in doing their job in a region mired in heightened political tension between the KDP and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) ahead of legislative elections,” the organisation said. “Police should do everything possible to identify the assailants and those who sent them to carry out this cowardly assault”.

Goran said he had no doubts about the identity of his assailants or their motives. “The KDP, headed by Massud Barzani, is clearly behind this attack. The reasons are also very clear: I am an independent newspaper that criticises the parties and politicians and I do not hesitate to reveal corruption cases. And that is what they cannot stand.”
“In this city, nobody could have done what they did without definite support from the authorities, and therefore the KDP. I live in a region where politicians do not understand democracy or the need for free media”, the very distressed journalist said.

It is the second assault on Goran and he has also been the target of a score of legal actions, the most recent by Chnar Saad Abdulla, minister of Martyrs.

Journalist colleagues have all strongly condemned the attack. Ahmed Mirra, managing editor of Leven, the principle Kurdish language publication said in an interview with the daily Ach-Charq al-Awsat, “This assault underlines the extreme difficulties encountered by journalists working in Iraqi Kurdistan today and the risks they run. The aim is to silence the free press that challenges the authorities on a daily basis”.

He referred to the ultimate price paid by his colleagues in Iraqi Kurdistan who have been murdered over the past few years in political score-settling, including Soran Mama Hama, who was killed in Kirkuk in July 2008. He also pointed to a complaint laid against his paper by the province’s governor, Massud Barzani, after it carried an article revealing his salary and other privileges. Distribution was halted of issue number 94 of the paper.

In Iraq, there has been a big upsurge in complaints against newspapers. Iraqi members of parliament on 8 November lodged a complaint against the daily al-Mada over an article published the previous day, written by Ward Badr As-Salam headlined “Parliamentarians beneath zero”, in which the journalist criticised the privileges they enjoy.

“These proceedings are very worrying, since they demonstrate an inability to tolerate any criticism. We urge the members of parliament to withdraw their suit”, said the organisation, which today sent a letter to this effect to the speaker of the House of Representatives.
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Updated on 20.01.2016