
By MOHAMED SHEIKH NOR
Saturday, June 07, 2008
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| Nasteex Dahir Farh, AP and BBC reporter in Kismayo
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Nasteex Dahir Farah, 26, was shot several times in the chest in the southern port city of Kismayo, said Dr. Mohamed Aden Dheel of Kismayo Hospital. He died at the hospital, Dheel said.
"His death is the total destruction of my life," Farah's wife, Idil Farey, told the AP. She is six months pregnant with the couple's second child, she said. Their oldest child, a son, is 10 months old.
Somalia, which has been mired in chaos and violence since 1991, is among the most dangerous countries in the world for journalists. At least nine other journalists have been killed in Somalia since February 2007, according to Amnesty International.
In a statement, the journalists' union condemned what it termed "the targeted assassination" and said Farah had received anonymous death threats.
"There is no authority in Somalia that (provides) justice and no one is protecting journalists," the group's secretary-general, Omar Faruk Osman, said in the statement.
"This deplorable, senseless killing of a courageous journalist is another sign of the fragility of press freedoms in Somalia and too many other countries around the world," said John Daniszewski, AP's managing editor for international news. "Our hearts go out to Farah's wife Idil Farey, their infant son, and to his many friends and colleagues in Mogadishu and elsewhere."
The Somali Coalition for Freedom of Expression, a Somali journalists' organization, urged reporters in the country "to be extremely vigilant."
Ahmed Said Ali, a nurse at the hospital where Farah died, said Farah told the medical staff that two men shot him with AK-47s. He said he fell in front of the gate to his house, according to Ali.
Ali also said that Farah bled to death while the medical staff waited for a doctor who could operate to arrive.
Farah contributed an essay on the dangers of working in Somalia to a Spring/Summer 2008 publication by the Committee to Protect Journalists, called 'Dangerous Assignments.' He wrote about Somali journalist Hassan Kafi Hared, who was killed by a land mine in January.
"Although answers about his death are sadly elusive, this one thing is certain," Farah writes. "Every day, his colleagues and family remember Hassan and what he made of his life."
Source: AP, June 07, 2008
