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User:Crtew/Mohammed Hourani

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Mohamed Hourani
محمد الحوراني
File:Screen Shot 2018-04-30 at 12.25.09 PM copy
Born
Mohamed Al-Massalma

ca. 1980
Died(2013-01-18)January 18, 2013
Cause of deathKilled by gun shot from a sniper
NationalitySyrian
OccupationJournalist
EmployerAl-Jazeera
Known forActivist. Covering the clashes in Syria.

Mohamed Hourani, (ca. 1980 – January 18, 2013), was a 33 year old Syrian journalist and TV reporter for the Al-Jazeera from Doha, Qatar. He was killed by a regime sniper while covering violent confrontations on a Friday afternoon in the province of Basr al-Harir located in Daraa, Syria.[1][2] The phenomenon following the murder was due to him covering the crisis due to the Syrian War. [3]


Personal[edit]

Hourani, whose real name was Mohamed Al-Massalma used a fictitious identity to keep him safe from the violence behind his journalism, was from Doha, Quatar. According to the news site they stated, that his family were refugees residing somewhere in Jordan. Before joining Al-Jazeera Al-Massalma was an activist in the revolution against president Bashar al-Assad.[4]

Career[edit]

Hourani was a TV reporter and journalist for the Al-Jazeera. His work was always at a high risk due to the accuracy that he would give in his work.[5] His peers talked highly about his dedication to his job, and claimed that he was both accurate and fearless when it came to covering certain issues.[6]

Death[edit]

Location of CITY
Aleppo
Aleppo
Basra al-Harir
Basra al-Harir
Hourani was shot twice on his back in the province of Basra al-Harir.[7]

Al-Massalma was shot and killed on January 18, 2013 by a sniper in a town called Basr al-Harir, in the Daraa province in Syria while covering the Syrian battle disputes. [8] There is a video recording of the attack on Al-Massaluma showing him in a khaki colored, Al-Jazeera jumper, with his glasses still on his face, and his brown hair parted in half. In the video he is shown in line with other rebels and being told to run across a muggy, muddy alleyway while the regime sniper shot at them, almost like a sick game. When his turn comes he can be seen running with his microphone still in hand, only to be taken down almost immediately by three bullets. His killing was due to a plan that the rebels formed to take over Daraa, who was split between both the government and the rebels at the time. [9] It's unsure how many people were involved in these killings but what is known that it is by the government itself. He was the second journalist in Syria to have been killed in less than a 24 hour window due to pro-government militias.[10] Before that attack in the city of Aleppo a French journalist, Yves Debay who was killed with two bullets. One shot to the head, and another in the chest, also by a sniper and for the same reason of covering the violence in Syria.[5] Because it was government affiliated there was no case, and no investigation that furthered into the killings of these journalist, along with others.

Context[edit]

In 2012, Syria was reported to be one of the most dangerous places for journalists.[11][12] It had a recorded body count of 28 killed journalist in 2012, making it be classified as the deadliest place to cover stories, especially ones that go against government officials.[13] During the revolt of president Bashar al-Assad, the country's very own government officials were killing insurgent's, and other activists covering war stories, or trying to riot. Due to Hourani's involvement in the rebel side and covering what his colleagues called blunt stories his life was at risk. The town of Basr al-Harir was a center point of the riots during the Syrian Civil War, which ultimately lead to danger and the killing of Hourani.[14] Syria's war conflict has killed about 60,000 people in less than two years with most of them being civilians.[15]

Impact[edit]

Al-Massalma was important for his role in his blunt and accurate work for the Al-Jazeera. Although he used a fake name to cover his work, he got caught in the crossfire of both the regime and rebels. He was not only a journalist but also a TV reporter.[9] After the deaths of many reporters, and innocent people, a petition was made especially for the Syrian war for the cause of war crimes to be looked in depth, but unfortunately the United Nations did not make this their focal point.[16]

Reactions[edit]

The death count for the reporters killed in Syria went up to 20, but other sources claim that there was at least up to 28 killed.[17] After several reporters and journalists being killed in 2012, Syria was labeled to be one of the most deadliest places for that line of work. [13] UN leader Ban Ki-moon stepped in and labeled Syria as being on a "death spiral" and pleaded for the UN Security Council to take a more authoritative movement towards the situation.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Snipers Kill Two Foreign Reporters in Syria". ABC News. 19 January 2013. Retrieved 7 Mar 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. ^ "Al-Jazeera Reporter Killed by Sniper". Radio New Zealand. 19 January 2013. Retrieved 7 March 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  3. ^ https://www.pri.org/stories/2013-01-18/journalists-yves-debay-mohamed-al-massalma-killed-snipers-syria
  4. ^ "2 journalists killed in Syria". 18 January 2013.
  5. ^ a b "Journalists Yves Debay, Mohamed Al-Massalma killed by snipers in Syria".
  6. ^ "Al-Jazeera Journalist Killed by Syrian Sniper". Israel National News.
  7. ^ http://www.findlatitudeandlongitude.com/
  8. ^ "Sniper kills Jazeera reporter in Syria". 18 January 2013.
  9. ^ a b "Mohammed al-Asfar". cpj.org.
  10. ^ "Sniper kills Al-Jazeera reporter in Syria". 20 January 2013.
  11. ^ "Snipers kill local, French journalists in Syria".
  12. ^ "Syria: A dangerous job for journalists". 2 May 2013.
  13. ^ a b "Another journalist killed in Syria". yalibnan.com.
  14. ^ "Massacre evidence seen in Syria". 20 February 2018 – via www.bbc.com.
  15. ^ "Sniper kills Al-Jazeera reporter in Syria".
  16. ^ "Ban warns of Syria 'death spiral'". The Nation.
  17. ^ "Journalists killed in Syria unrest".

External links[edit]