speda – Radio Free https://www.radiofree.org Independent Media for People, Not Profits. Thu, 13 Feb 2025 15:38:29 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://www.radiofree.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/cropped-Radio-Free-Social-Icon-2-32x32.png speda – Radio Free https://www.radiofree.org 32 32 141331581 Dozens of Iraqi Kurdistan journalists teargassed, arrested, raided over protest https://www.radiofree.org/2025/02/13/dozens-of-iraqi-kurdistan-journalists-teargassed-arrested-raided-over-protest/ https://www.radiofree.org/2025/02/13/dozens-of-iraqi-kurdistan-journalists-teargassed-arrested-raided-over-protest/#respond Thu, 13 Feb 2025 15:38:29 +0000 https://cpj.org/?p=453162 Sulaymaniyah, Iraq, February 13, 2025—The Committee to Protect Journalists is alarmed by Kurdistan security forces’ assault on 12 news crews covering a February 9 protest by teachers and other public employees over unpaid salaries, which resulted in at least 22 journalists teargassed, two arrested, and a television station raided.

“The aggressive treatment meted out to journalists by Erbil security forces while covering a peaceful protest is deeply concerning,” said CPJ Program Director Carlos Martinez de la Serna, in New York. “We urge Iraqi Kurdistan authorities not to target journalists during protests, which has been a recurring issue.”

Kurdistan has been in a financial crisis since the federal government began cutting funding to the region after it started exporting oil independently in 2014. In 2024, the Federal Supreme Court ordered Baghdad to pay Kurdistan’s civil servants directly but ongoing disagreements between the two governments mean their salaries continue to be delayed and unpaid.

Since the end of Kurdistan’s civil war in 1998, the semi-autonomous region has been divided between the dominant Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) in Erbil and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) in Sulaymaniyah. While the KDP has discouraged the teachers’ protests, the PUK has sometimes supported them, including through affiliated media outlets.

At the February 9 protest, a crowd of teachers from Sulaymaniyah tried to reach Erbil, the capital, and were stopped at Degala checkpoint, where CPJ recorded the following attacks:

  • Pro-opposition New Generation Movement NRT TV camera operator Ali Abdulhadi and reporter Shiraz Abdullah were stopped from filming by about seven armed security officers, known in Kurdish as Asayish, according to a video posted by the outlet.

“One of them chambered a round [into his gun]. I tried to leave but one of them attempted to strike me with the butt of a rifle, hitting only my finger. Another grabbed my camera and took it,” Abdulhadi told CPJ.

Diplomatic’s reporter Zhilya Ali is seen lying on another woman's lap after being teargassed.
Diplomatic’s reporter Zhilya Ali is seen lying on another woman’s lap after being teargassed. (Screenshot: Diplomatic)

“There are still wounds on my face from when I fell,” she told CPJ, adding that she was taken to hospital and given oxygen.

  • An ambulance took pro-PUK digital outlet Zhyan Media’s reporter Mardin Mohammed and camera operator Mohammed Mariwan to a hospital in Koya after they were teargassed.

“I couldn’t see anything and was struggling to breathe. My cameraman and I lost consciousness for three hours,” Mariwan told CPJ.

  • Pro-PUK satellite channel Kurdsat News reporters Gaylan Sabir and Amir Mohammed and camera operators Sirwan Sadiq and Hemn Mohammed were teargassed and their equipment was confiscated, the outlet said.
  • Privately owned Westga News said five staff — reporters Omer Ahmed, Shahin Fuad, and Amir Hassan, and camera operators Zanyar Mariwan and Ahmed Shakhawan — were attacked and teargassed. Ahmed told CPJ that a security officer grabbed a camera while they were broadcasting, while Fuad said another camera, microphone, and a livestreaming encoder were also taken and not returned.
Camera operator Sivar Baban (third from left) is helped to walk after being teargassed.
Camera operator Sivar Baban (third from left) is helped to walk after being teargassed. (Photo: Hamasur)
  • Pro-PUK Slemani News Network reporter Kochar Hamza was carried to safety by protesters after she collapsed due to tear gas, a video by the digital outlet showed. She told CPJ that she and her camera operator Sivar Baban were treated at hospitals twice.

“My face is still swollen, and I feel dizzy,” she told CPJ.

  • A team from Payam TV, a pro-opposition Kurdistan Justice Group satellite channel, required treatment for teargas exposure.

“We were placed on oxygen and prescribed medication,” reporter Ramyar Osman told CPJ, adding that camera operator Sayed Yasser was hit in the knee by a rubber bullet.

  • Madah Jamal, a reporter with the pro-opposition Kurdistan Islamic Union Speda TV satellite channel, told CPJ that he was also teargassed.
  • Pro-PUK digital outlet Xendan’s reporter Shahen Wahab told CPJ that she and camera operator Garmian Omar suffered asthma attacks due to the teargas.
  • Pro-PUK satellite channel Gali Kurdistan’s reporter Karwan Nazim told CPJ that he had to stop reporting because he couldn’t breathe and asked his office to send additional staff.

“I had an allergic reaction and my face turned red. I had to go to the hospital,” he said.

Raided and arrested

Teachers and other public employees protest unpaid salaries in Kurdistan in 2015.
Teachers and other public employees protest unpaid salaries in Kurdistan in 2015. Police used teargas and rubber bullets to disperse them. (Screenshot: Voice of America/YouTube)

Abdulwahab Ahmed, head of the Erbil office of the pro-opposition Gorran Movement KNN TV, told CPJ that two unplated vehicles carrying Asayish officers followed KNN TV’s vehicle to the office at around 1:30 p.m., after reporters Pasha Sangar and Mohammed KakaAhmed and camera operator Halmat Ismail made a live broadcast showing the deployment of additional security forces by the United Nations compound, which was the protesters’ intended destination.

“They identified themselves as Asayish forces, forcibly took our mobile phones, and accused us of recording videos. They checked our social media accounts,” Sangar told CPJ.

KakaAhmed told CPJ, “They found a video I had taken near the U.N. compound on my phone, deleted it, and then returned our devices.”

In another incident that evening, Asayish forces arrested pro-PUK digital outlet Politic Press’s reporter Taman Rawandzi and camera operator Nabi Malik Faisal while they were live broadcasting about the protest and took them to Zerin station for several hours of questioning.

“They asked us to unlock our phones but we refused. Then they took our phones and connected them to a computer,” Rawandzi told CPJ, adding that his phone was now operating slowly and he intended to replace it.

“They told us not to cover such protests,” he said.

CPJ phoned Erbil’s Asayish spokesperson Ardalan Fatih but he declined to comment.


This content originally appeared on Committee to Protect Journalists and was authored by Committee to Protect Journalists.

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Journalist Islam Kashani arrested in Iraqi Kurdistan https://www.radiofree.org/2023/08/25/journalist-islam-kashani-arrested-in-iraqi-kurdistan/ https://www.radiofree.org/2023/08/25/journalist-islam-kashani-arrested-in-iraqi-kurdistan/#respond Fri, 25 Aug 2023 14:26:31 +0000 https://cpj.org/?p=310289 Beirut, August 25, 2023 – Iraqi Kurdish authorities should immediately and unconditionally release journalist Islam Kashani, disclose the reasons for his arrest and the raid on his home, and ensure the press can work freely, the Committee to Protect Journalists said Friday.

On Thursday, August 24, Asayish intelligence agents arrested Kashani, a host on the broadcaster Xabir TV and head of the local office of Speda satellite TV, at his home in the Iraqi Kurdish city of Zakho, according to a report by Speda as well as his brother and two of his colleagues, who spoke to CPJ.

Authorities did not present a warrant for Kashani’s arrest and raided his home hours after his detention. He remained in Asayish custody as of Friday.

The day before his arrest, during a segment on his Gulsen news program, Kashani criticized the Kurdistan Regional Government’s alleged corruption and mismanagement of public salaries, as well as the poor living conditions of local security forces.

“Iraqi Kurdish authorities must immediately release journalist Islam Kashani and ensure that members of the press are not arrested in retaliation for their work,” said CPJ Middle East and North Africa Program Coordinator Sherif Mansour, in Washington, D.C. “Authorities must end their pattern of detaining and intimidating journalists, and allow them to cover issues of public interest freely.”

Mahir Sagvan, director of the Xabir media agency, told CPJ that he called the Asayish after Kashani failed to show up for work.

“Asayish said they had no clue about his whereabouts and stated that he’s not in their custody,” Sagvan said. “After four hours, they raided his house, and told us that Islam was arrested.“

He told CPJ he believed Kashani was arrested due to his “consistent voicing criticism against the government and corruption of the ruling parties.”

Speda TV director Abdulkarim Ahmad told CPJ that Kashani’s arrest was “entirely unlawful with no justification.”

“We are sure that the grounds for his arrest are related to his journalistic activities,” he said. “He always stands with his people and criticizes the government and local authorities, but without any defamation.”

Ahmed Kashani, the journalist’s brother, told CPJ that “about four hours after his arrest, a vehicle carrying five Asayish members conducted a raid on Islam’s residence without presenting a court warrant. They conducted a thorough search and departed without seizing any items.”

He added that Asayish forces confirmed Kashani’s detention at the agency’s headquarters in Zakho but refused to give any reason for his arrest.

Speda and Xabir TV are both associated with the Kurdistan Islamic Union, a local Islamist party.

CPJ repeatedly called Zakho Asayish head Shvan Sindi for comment but did not receive any reply. CPJ emailed the Kurdistan Regional Government but did not immediately receive any response.


This content originally appeared on Committee to Protect Journalists and was authored by Erik Crouch.

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