
Taysir Alluni could never have suspected that
the 9/11 attacks and the US war against Afghanistan in its hunt
for al-Qaida and Taliban leaders would dramatically change his
life.
Alluni, who began his career as an Arabic translator for a news
agency in Granada, Spain, is credited as being the only journalist
based in Afghanistan in October 2001 to show the world what
the US war machine was doing to one of the world's poorest countries.
By then working for Aljazeera, Alluni was able
to capture images of civilian victims in the destitute villages
of Afghanistan and the miserable streets of Kabul. His coverage
triggered international outrage over the US action in Afghanistan.
Alluni's work in that war-torn country came
to an end when US forces bombed Aljazeera's Kabul office just
hours before the Northern Alliance entered the Afghan capital.
While many say the office was deliberately targeted, Aljazeera
keeps an open mind, while still asking for an official investigation.
Alluni left Kabul shortly before his office
was bombed, following the Taliban retreat and reporting on it.
Much of what he witnessed was too distressing to show and he
was himself assaulted. "Scenes that, I'm sorry, I could
not describe to anybody," he said.
Beaten and mugged, Alluni has not said who
attacked him but described the incident as leaving him "in
deep psychological shock".
Back to Qatar
Alluni returned to Doha, Qatar, exhausted and
with mixed emotions.
Although professionally satisfied at being able to report the
war - reportage that earned him international recognition -
the images of suffering were painful to carry.
A respected member of staff, the appreciation he received from
his colleagues back in Doha helped Alluni recover from his stint
in Afghanistan and surgery he underwent in the Qatari capital.
To war zone once more
Despite his deteriorating health, Alluni headed
to Baghdad in the second week of the US war on Iraq in March
2003 on his next assignment.
While reporting there, he once more narrowly escaped a US bombardment.
That he survived the US bombing of the Aljazeera Baghdad bureau
is little short of a miracle. Aljazeera continues to pursue
an official response to this attack - an onslaught that killed
his colleague, Aljazeera reporter Tariq Ayub.
Behind bars
When US President George Bush officially declared
the Iraq war over, Alluni chose Spain as his destination for
a holiday, thinking that his Spanish citizenship would help
him avoid harassment and facilitate his movements.
His hopes proved to be unfounded. Syrian-born
Alluni, a father of five, was arrested in September 2003 at
his home in Granada. He is accused of being a member of a group
in Spain belonging to al-Qaida.
Alluni was bailed on medical grounds about a month later. He
has a serious heart condition.
However, he was re-arrested in November 2003 for fear he may
flee the country while awaiting trial.
He remains behind bars, a situation that has sparked outrage
among Arab human rights groups, journalists and colleagues,
who describe this controversial prosecution of this very modern
Arab icon as nothing more than an attack on the freedom of the
press.
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