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Last updated on May 28, 2012 at 6:14 EDT

Two CBS journalists among four dead in Baghdad bomb

May 29, 2006
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By Alastair Macdonald

BAGHDAD (Reuters) – Two British journalists working for
U.S. television network CBS were among four people killed when
a car bomb hit a U.S. military patrol in Baghdad on Monday.

American CBS correspondent Kimberly Dozier was seriously
wounded and six U.S. soldiers were also injured, CBS and the
U.S. military said in separate statements.

An unnamed U.S. soldier and an Iraqi civilian working with
the military were killed along with the network’s London-based
cameraman Paul Douglas, 48, and soundman James Brolan, 42.

Dozier, 39 and a long-time reporter on Middle East affairs,
was operated on in a Baghdad military hospital. Doctors were
“cautiously optimistic,” CBS said.

The crew had been filming a report on a joint U.S. and
Iraqi army patrol through the Iraqi capital in mid-morning.

“A vehicle-borne improvised explosive device struck the
patrol in central Baghdad at approximately 10:30 a.m. (0630
GMT),” the U.S. military said. A spokesman said it was not
clear if a suicide attacker had rammed the car into the convoy.

It was one of the deadliest attacks on a U.S. patrol in
central Baghdad for some time. Fellow journalists arrived
quickly at the scene to see a Humvee armored patrol vehicle in
flames and U.S. troops securing the immediate area.

The CBS news team had “embedded” with a unit of the 4th
Infantry Division for a brief reporting assignment, colleagues
said. It was Memorial Day in the United States, a public
holiday dedicated to remembering America’s war dead.

The attack was one of a number of blasts that claimed at
least 40 lives, most of them in Baghdad.

DANGEROUS PROFESSION

More than 70 journalists have been killed in Iraq since the
U.S. invasion of 2003, making it by some measures the deadliest
conflict for the profession since World War Two.

Douglas had worked for CBS News in Afghanistan, Pakistan,
Rwanda and Bosnia, as well as Iraq, since the early 1990s.

A towering figure with an easy going manner, he was a
distinctive and well-liked presence in Baghdad’s small corps of
foreign journalists.

Brolan was a freelancer who had worked with CBS in Baghdad
and Afghanistan over the past year, CBS said.

“This is a devastating loss for CBS News,” said Sean
McManus, president of CBS News and Sports.

“Kimberly, Paul and James were veterans of war coverage who
proved their bravery and dedication every single day. They
always volunteered for dangerous assignments and were
invaluable in our attempt to report the news to the American
public.”

(Additional reporting by Stuart Grudgings in Washington and
Lutfi Abu Oun, Waleed Mubdir and Ali Jassim in Baghdad)

(Editing by Elizabeth Piper)


Source: reuters