BBC
reporters in
Afghanistan,
Somalia killed
(Mogadishu, Monday
,9,June,
2008,(Hornafrik
Media)
Last
Updated:
Sunday, June 8, 2008
| 12:56 PM ET Comments12Recommend30CBC News
Two BBC
journalists were killed over the weekend, one in Afghanistan
and one in Somalia, the British public broadcaster said.
The BBC
confirmed on Sunday that Abdul Samad Rohani, an Afghan
journalist working for the BBC World Service, was found on
Sunday afternoon, shot dead in Afghanistan's southern Helmand
province.
Rohani had
been abducted on Saturday.
The BBC
lauded the journalist for his "courage and dedication" as a
member of the corporation's
Kabul
bureau.
"His death
is a terrible loss — our thoughts are with his friends and
family. We are working closely with his family to support them
at this difficult time," said the BBC in a statement on
Sunday.
There have
been a number of attacks on journalists in Afghanistan this
year. The Kabul-based South Asia Media Commission says five
Afghan journalists were killed in 2007.
Somalian journalist killed while heading home
Meanwhile,
Nasteh Dahir, who worked for both the BBC and the Associated
Press, was shot on Saturday by gunmen in Kismayo, 500
kilometres south of the capital Mogadishu southern Somalia.
The 36-year-old reporter died later in hospital.
Family
members say he was on his way to his home when he was shot.
"We are
shocked by what has happened and are trying to ascertain
further information," said a statement released by the BBC in
London.
Paris-based
Reporters Without Borders voiced outrage over the number of
journalists being murdered in
Somalia.
"We share
the dreadful grief that has struck the family and colleagues
of Nasteh Dahir Farah. The list of dead just goes on growing
while the authorities take no steps to curb the violence which
targets journalists," RSF said in a statement.
"This
apathy is disgraceful given the fact that Somalia is Africa's
deadliest country for journalists," the statement added.
Last year,
eight journalists died in targetted killings in Somalia.