IRAQI KURDISTAN: “We are not grateful to be here”—CPT attends memorial service for Sardasht Osman
CPTnet
18 May 2012
IRAQI KURDISTAN: “We are not grateful to be here”—CPT attends memorial service
for Sardasht Osman
Saturday, 5 May marked the two-year anniversary of Kurdish
journalist Sardasht Osman’s murder. CPTers traveled to Hawler (Erbil) to stand in solidarity with
Osman’s family, friends, and colleagues, as they remembered the young man. Osman, who was twenty-three at the time
of his death, was in his final year at university in Hawler, and frequently
published articles critical of the Kurdish Regional Government and prominent
party
leaders. According to the
Committee to Project Journalists (CPJ), “the Kurdistan Regional Government
issued a 430-word report in September 2010 claiming that Osman had been killed
by a member of Ansar al-Islam, an extremist group, for not carrying out work he
had promised to do. The report
provided no evidence for the assertion. CPJ and other press groups said the report lacked
credibility.”
On Saturday, CPTers, along with their partner Mohammed Salah, joined a crowd of
about 150 people at the cemetery where Osman is buried. The media presence was significant as
well—many present were Osman’s colleagues. After the ceremony, CPTers met with Osman’s father and older
brother, as well as reporters, and CPTer Garland Robertson gave an interview to
the Kurdish News Network (KNN).
Later, CPTers and Salah attended a seminar in honor of Osman; several of
Osman’s colleagues spoke. The
event’s coordinator, Ni'as Abdullah from the Metro Center to Defend
Journalists, asked the government to form a new committee to investigate the
death of Osman, and questioned the independence of the current one.
Ahmed Mira, editor of Lvin Magazine, said that the team who is investigating Osman’s
murder is “a joke,” and “not serious” in their work. “It is a shame for the authorities that a student was kidnapped
in his university and after three days his body was found in a different city. It raises many questions in our minds,
as journalists.”
A member of the Kurdish Parliament also attended. Adnan Osman (unrelated to Sardasht) said that when he learned
that a student from the university was killed two years ago, he had no idea he
was also a journalist. “We lost a
brave journalist that wanted to use his pen and write about the corruption and
inform the society about how both the governmental parties are stealing money
and oil,” he said.
Melinda Crowley, a diplomat from the U.S. Consulate in Hawler, spoke at length
about the importance of a free press within democratic societies, and
instructed those listening that journalists should be encouraged to speak truth
to power. CPT followed with a
statement, delivered by Robertson and Salah and printed below, expressing
dismay that such a seminar was necessary. Robertson and Salah also emphasized
CPT’s concern about ongoing attacks on journalists within Iraqi Kurdistan.
That evening, the Kurdish News Network (KNN) devoted thirty minutes to the
anniversary of Osman’s death as its lead story, using the entirety of CPT’s
statement at the seminar, as well as coverage from the memorial at the cemetery
earlier in the day.
CPT’s Statement:
We are not grateful to be here, in this sad assembly. CPT regrets that you lost your son and
brother, your friend and your brave journalist Kaka Sardasht Osman. We are concerned about the ongoing
attacks that journalists and media professionals have endured in these recent
months. We urge the Kurdish
government to protect the life of all its citizens and their freedom of speech
and movement. 
Additional photos are available with captions at our blog.