piątek, 20 maja 2011

South African photographer killed in Libya

Updated May 20, 2011 23:32:00

Posters of South African freelance photographer Anton Hammerl

The Libyan government had for weeks said Mr Hammerl, 41, was alive. (Reuters: Siphiwe Sibeko )

Anton Hammerl, a South African photographer who had been missing in Libya, was shot dead six weeks ago by leader Moamar Gaddafi's forces, his family said in a statement.

"Anton was shot by Gaddafi's forces in an extremely remote location in the Libyan desert. According to eyewitnesses, his injuries were such that he could not have survived without medical attention," the Hammerl family said in a statement posted on Facebook.

"Words are simply not enough to describe the unbelievable trauma the Hammerl family is going through."

The Libyan government had for weeks said Mr Hammerl, 41, was alive.

Musa Ibrahim, the official spokesman for the government of Mr Gaddafi, said on Tuesday that Mr Hammerl would be among a group of four detained foreign journalists who were to be freed in Tripoli on Wednesday.

But upon their release the other journalists said Mr Hammerl had been killed when they came under attack and were captured on April 5.

American James Foley, a reporter for GlobalPost who was one of those released Wednesday, told the online news agency that Mr Hammerl had been shot by Gaddafi forces while the group reported from the rebel-held front lines on the outskirts of the strategic oil town of Brega.

The Austrian foreign ministry said on April 25 that Mr Hammerl, a South African with Austrian parents, was alive and well after a "number of exchanges" with Libyan authorities.

- AFP

Tags: photography, journalism, unrest-conflict-and-war, austria, libya, south-africa

First posted May 20, 2011 23:13:00

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Source: http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2011/05/20/3223027.htm

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