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DarrinS
02-03-2011, 05:38 PM
http://abcnews.go.com/International/abc-reporter-threatened-beheading-covering-egypt-uprising/story?id=12832774




A group of angry Egyptian men carjacked an ABC News crew and threatened to behead them today in the latest and most menacing attack on foreign reporters trying to cover the anti-government uprising.

Producer Brian Hartman, cameraman Akram Abi-hanna and two other ABC News employees were surrounded on a crowded road that leads from Cairo's airport to the city's downtown area.

While ABC News and other press agencies had been taking precautions to avoid volatile situations, the road to the airport had been a secure route until today. One of their two vehicles was carrying cameras and transmission equipment strapped to the roof, indicating they were foreign journalists.

Hartman says it was only through the appeal of Abi-hanna, who is Lebanese and a veteran ABC cameraman, that they were saved from being killed or severely beaten.

"We thought we were goners," Hartman said later. "We absolutely thought we were doomed."

Word of their harrowing ordeal came in a Twitter message from Hartman that stated, "Just escaped after being carjacked at a checkpoint and driven to a compound where men surrounded the car and threatened to behead us."

"The men released us only after our camera man appealed to the generous spirit of the Egyptian people, hugging and kissing an elder," he added in a subsequent tweet.

Minutes after receiving news that Hartman had been safely released, ABC News anchor Christiane Amanpour and her team were surrounded and interrogated by a threatening crowd in Cairo when they were en route to the presidential palace to interview Mubarak and Vice President Omar Suleiman.

The alarm was sent back to ABC News headquarters in Cairo in a series of quick comments during a phone call. "We're in trouble on the bridge," was all that was initially said. The bridge is on the same road where Hartman and Abi-hanna were carjacked.

Moments later, the ABC News staffer said, "They're surrounding us."

Then cryptically, "We have to go."

Amanpour and her team were allowed to proceed, but it was the second time in two days that her team has been targeted by groups of men angry with foreign coverage of the demonstrations that are demanding President Hosni Mubarak end his 30-year rule by stepping down immediately.

Foreign news reporters have increasingly become targets of the attacks in Cairo as the Mubarak government teeters and dozens of reporters including CNN's Anderson Cooper and CBS anchor Katie Couric have been menaced, forced off the road, shoved against fences, and physically assaulted. A Greek reporter was stabbed in the leg.

White House spokesman Robert Gibbs condemned the "systematic targeting" of journalists in Egypt, and the U.S. State Department described it as a "concerted campaign to intimidate."

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton lectured the Egyptian government in a news conference today that it "must demonstrate its willingness to ensure journalists' ability to report on these events to the people of Egypt and to the world."

Joel Simon, executive director of the Committee to Protect Journalists, said, "Egypt is seeking to create an information vacuum that puts it in the company of the world's worst oppressors."

The growing fury was noted by Hartman in his tweets before his confrontation.

"Getting reports of journalists being attacked all over Cairo," he tweeted Wednesday.

Hartman and Abi-hanna headed for the airport today to collect equipment that had been impounded upon their arrival Tuesday. After collecting their gear, Hartman tweeted, "Cairo Airport security had to hold back a spitting mad man who was shouting at one of my colleagues about media bias against the govt."

In today's incident, Hartman said the two-car convoy was stopped at one of the many makeshift checkpoints that have sprung up around Cairo, most of them created by neighborhood groups to protect themselves from looters.

Their drivers were forced into the back seats and one man tried to snatch a camera from the car, but it was grabbed back. Men from the checkpoint drove them down "a dusty, beat up street where some people opened up the dinged-up barricades and drove us down to a dingy little cul de sac," Hartman said.

A large banner of Mubarak hung over the street and dozens of men were standing around, Hartman said.

"Then they directed our driver to take us down a dark, narrow alleyway. A man sitting next to me with a cigarette dropping ashes on my shoulder.... No way, we can't go down this alley, I told our driver, and he turned off the car."

The two vehicles were quickly engulfed by men who poured out of the alley. "It gradually escalated, the tension and anger in their voice.... It was pretty clear we were in a threatening situation. People were making gestures and putting their fingers under my throat" and making a slitting motion, he said.

"A man in police uniform came up to me and said, 'So help me God.... I am going to cut off your head,'" Hartman recalled.

One man was yelling, "Cut their necks now, cut their necks now," and another pointed an imaginary machine gun at Hartman and made shooting noises.

"I couldn't see outside the windows except angry faces and the gestures. I thought we were absolutely doomed," Hartman said.

They were saved, he said, when Abi-hanna "lunged forward and gave a great big bear hug" to a man who appeared to be an elder of the neighborhood. "He gave him a kiss on each cheek and told the man referring to me, 'He is my guest. He is your guest in this country. Egyptian people are better than this."

Hartman said the cameraman appealed to the "renowned generosity of the Egyptian people."

Abi-hanna's words "seemed to calm the tensions down" enough for them to get the cars in gear and escape, despite the efforts of some to stop them.

Hartman said that through it all, none of their equipment was stolen and they were not punched or physically abused.

Reporters for other news outlets, including NBC, BBC and FOX, have reported that their hotel rooms have been ransacked.

Some men charged onto the roof of the Ramses Hilton Hotel where APTN maintains a satellite dish that networks, including ABC News, use to transmit their stories. They broke apart the dish and APTN technicians had to jump from the roof to another roof two floors below.

ChumpDumper
02-03-2011, 07:33 PM
And?

ElNono
02-03-2011, 07:48 PM
Just curious, were those guys pro-Mubarak or anti-Mubarak?

DarrinS
02-03-2011, 08:47 PM
Just curious, were those guys pro-Mubarak or anti-Mubarak?



Pro, according to the op.

Yonivore
02-03-2011, 09:30 PM
http://blogs.dailymail.com/donsurber/files/2011/02/McKee_C20110202-1.jpg

ElNono
02-03-2011, 09:51 PM
Pro, according to the op.

Thanks. So, we're basically supporting those guys. Just truly sad.

ChumpDumper
02-03-2011, 09:58 PM
http://blogs.dailymail.com/donsurber/files/2011/02/McKee_C20110202-1.jpgWhat is he supposed to do, yoni?

Invade?

DarrinS
02-03-2011, 10:04 PM
Thanks. So, we're basically supporting those guys. Just truly sad.



The Muslim Brotherhood is very pro-West. Wait for it.

ChumpDumper
02-03-2011, 10:07 PM
Is there only a choice between the dictatorship and fundamentalism, Darrin?

ElNono
02-03-2011, 10:28 PM
The Muslim Brotherhood is very pro-West. Wait for it.

Disingenuous.

Mubarak isn't pro-West either, he's just corrupt enough to get a payout so he'll pretend to be a pal of Israel. I guess we support dictators as long as we can pay them off...

Stringer_Bell
02-03-2011, 10:30 PM
Is there only a choice between the dictatorship and fundamentalism, Darrin?

I'd rather have a dictator installed that we're cordial with than elected fundamentalists that fucking hate us.

ChumpDumper
02-03-2011, 10:33 PM
I'd rather have a dictator installed that we're cordial with than elected fundamentalists that fucking hate us.


Is there only a choice between the dictatorship and fundamentalism?

Yonivore
02-03-2011, 10:33 PM
I'd rather have a dictator installed that we're cordial with than elected fundamentalists that fucking hate us.
Just like Jimmy Carter, Barack Obama doesn't see it that way.

Obama may actually be the worst President ever. I hear Carter is relieved.

ChumpDumper
02-03-2011, 10:34 PM
What exactly is yoni demanding Obama do here?

I guess if Bush were still president, we would be invading Jordan.

Stringer_Bell
02-03-2011, 10:42 PM
What exactly is yoni demanding Obama do here?

I guess if Bush were still president, we would be invading Jordan.

Jordan is our friend, silly! Bush would invade Iran and Syria and maybe Lebanon if Dick was feeling really ballsy. Obama needs Bolton in the State Dept if he knows what's good for our interests in the Middle East.

ChumpDumper
02-03-2011, 10:57 PM
Jordan is our friend, silly!So was Iraq, silly!

Bolton is an idiot.l

Stringer_Bell
02-03-2011, 11:04 PM
So was Iraq, silly!

Bolton is an idiot.l

Iraq wasn't our friend after the Gulf War, and he stepped on our toes!

ChumpDumper
02-03-2011, 11:05 PM
Iraq wasn't our friend after the Gulf War, and he stepped on our toes!No! He didn't! Not our toes!

Spurminator
02-04-2011, 09:37 AM
Obviously what the US needs to do is squash the Egyptian people's dissent. It's definitely in our best interest moving forward to support an unpopular dictator while the world watches.

Oh, Gee!!
02-04-2011, 10:09 AM
Where's your messiah now, chumpdumper?

BlairForceDejuan
02-04-2011, 10:55 AM
If you don't want to be threatened, stay in your own country. Pretty simple concept.

clambake
02-04-2011, 11:19 AM
If you don't want to be threatened, stay in your own country. Pretty simple concept.

not for yoni.

ChumpDumper
02-04-2011, 03:04 PM
Where's your messiah now, chumpdumper?I thought we were supposed to start a war in this area so we could see the messiah sooner.

Nbadan
02-04-2011, 04:05 PM
This is the real reason why wing-nuts love Mubarak...he's just like them!

In one of the poorest nations in the world..


President Hosni Mubarak's family fortune could be as much as $70bn (£43.5bn) according to analysis by Middle East experts, with much of his wealth in British and Swiss banks or tied up in real estate in London, New York, Los Angeles and along expensive tracts of the Red Sea coast.

After 30 years as president and many more as a senior military official, Mubarak has had access to investment deals that have generated hundreds of millions of pounds in profits. Most of those gains have been taken offshore and deposited in secret bank accounts or invested in upmarket homes and hotels.

According to a report last year in the Arabic newspaper Al Khabar, Mubarak has properties in Manhattan and exclusive Beverly Hills addresses on Rodeo Drive.

His sons, Gamal and Alaa, are also billionaires. A protest outside Gamal's ostentatious home at 28 Wilton Place in Belgravia, central London, highlighted the family's appetite for western trophy assets.


Guardian (http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/feb/04/hosni-mubarak-family-fortune)

I wonder how many pairs of shoes his wife has...

Yonivore
02-04-2011, 04:13 PM
I wonder how many pairs of shoes his wife has...
I wonder if he would stone his wife to death for showing her face or baring her forearm.

Nbadan
02-04-2011, 04:14 PM
I wonder if he tortures prisoners many whom are later released without charges?

Yonivore
02-04-2011, 04:18 PM
I wonder if he tortures prisoners many whom are later released without charges?
I wonder if the Muslim Brotherhood even bothers with the pretense of charges...or, releases anyone.

ChumpDumper
02-04-2011, 04:19 PM
I wonder if the Muslim Brotherhood even bothers with the pretense of charges...or, releases anyone.Does Mubarak?