21 Aug 2012

Japanese journalist dies of wounds from Syria gunfight

An award-winning Japanese journalist dies after a gunfight between Syrian forces and rebels in Aleppo while she was travelling with the Free Syrian Army.

Journalist Mika Yamamoto died of wounds sustained in a gunflight in Syria (Getty)

Mika Yamamoto, a 45-year-old award-winning video journalist working for Tokyo-based independent news wire Japan Press, was fatally wounded in the fighting, a Japanese foreign ministry official said.

In a telephone interview with a Japanese TV news programme, fellow Japan Press reporter Kazutaka Sato, who was travelling with Yamamoto, said it appeared she was shot by government forces.

“We saw a group of people in camouflage fatigues coming toward us. They appeared to be government soldiers. They started random shooting. They were just 20, 30 metres away or even closer,” said Sato.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the clash occurred in the Suleimaniya district of Aleppo, the scene of heavy fighting between government and rebel forces.

Pioneer

Japan Press was not immediately available for comment. Its website said Yamamoto reported from Afghanistan under the Taliban and covered the 2003 Iraq war from Baghdad.

Ms Yamamoto’s Iraq reporting won a Vaughn-Ueda prize given by the Japanese Newspaper Publishers and Editors Association and modelled on the US Pulitzers media awards.

In April 2003 she narrowly escaped a US tank attack on the Palestine Hotel in Baghdad, Jiji news agency said, while news agency Kyodo described her as a “pioneer video journalist”.

Ms Yamamoto is the first Japanese killed in the current armed conflict in Syria, the ministry official said.

“It is extremely regrettable that a Japanese reporter was gunned down and killed,” Chief Cabinet Secretary Osamu Fujimura said at a daily news briefing.

“We reproach such an act and offer our heartfelt condolences to those left behind.”

Disappearances

The Syrian activist group also said that a Lebanese journalist, a Turkish journalist and an Arab journalist, whose nationality it did not identify, had disappeared in Aleppo.

According to the Reporters Without Borders organization, Syria and Somalia rank as the world’s most dangerous countries for media this year, with five journalists and three media assistants killed in Syria by early August and eight journalists killed in Somalia.

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, battling a 17-month-old uprising against his family’s 42-year rule, has used fighter jets and helicopter gunships to pound rebel strongholds, often in cities. Insurgents in turn have stepped up their own attacks, hitting tanks, military convoys and security buildings.

At least 18,000 people have now been killed in Syria since the anti-Assad revolt began.