Sept. 26: Paying the price for Journalists.
Baghdad - Someone planted a bomb outside the NBC News bureau here yesterday. All
journalists in Baghdad have to worry about their security, so I stopped by today
to see just how it had happened.
The side of the Aike Hotel, where NBC was
based, was shattered - all the windows and some of a masonry wall blown in. The
bomb had been placed on the sidewalk, near the hotel's generator.
This morning, workers had swept up the glass, wires, insulation, and other
debris of an urban bombing. And the NBC crew was moving out.
As most news stories noted, one NBC technician was slightly injured in the
attack - took a few stitches for a nasty cut. - and the NBC crew otherwise
got out of it intact. Thank heaven.
But you may have noticed, in just a phrase or a sentence in most stories,
that someone was killed - a hotel attendant who was sleeping downstairs close
to the generator. There wasn't much news about him yesterday, but I think
it's worth taking note: His name was Awais. He was a Somali who had emigrated
from that wretched land to Iraq in search of a better chance at life. He was
managing it, with a low-status but steady job in an elite hotel. He had married
and with his wife was expecting their fourth child, according to Saad Jawad, a
co-owner of the Aike Hotel.
"The killing of this nice gentleman is very
upsetting," said Jawad. "I don't know how his family is going to manage now."
If there ever was a war in which most of the people killed were the ones
being targeted, it has not been any of those I've covered in the past 20 years.
As often than not, it seems, your risk in human warfare is determined by
matters of status - in this case, whether you sleep downstairs by the generator,
or a couple of floors up, in a junior suite.
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