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   » » Wiki: Giuliana Sgrena
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Giuliana Sgrena (born 20 December 1948) is an Italian journalist who works for the Italian communist newspaper and the German weekly . While working in , she was kidnapped by insurgents on 4 February 2005. After her release on 4 March, Sgrena and the two Italian intelligence officers who had helped secure her release came under fire from U.S. forces while on their way to Baghdad International Airport. , a major general in the Italian Military Intelligence and Security Service () was killed, and Sgrena and Andrea Carpani, the other Italian officer taking her to the airport, were wounded in the incident. The event caused an international outcry.


Background and career
Giuliana Sgrena was born and raised in , Province of Verbano-Cusio-Ossola, a town of fewer than 1,000 people that had seen during World War II between Italian partisans and German soldiers. Her father, Franco Sgrena, was a noted partisan during the war and later became an activist in the communist railway union.

Sgrena studied in where she became involved in leftist politics. She became a professed and from 1980 worked for Guerra e Pace, a weekly publication edited by Michelangelo Notarianni. In 1988, she joined the communist paper Il Manifesto and, as a war correspondent, has since covered conflicts such as the Algerian Civil War, the Somali and the Afghanistan conflicts. During her travels, she reported extensively on topics from the Horn of Africa, the and the Middle East.

As a campaigner for women's rights, she has been particularly concerned with the conditions of women under . About this topic she wrote Alla scuola dei Taleban ("At the Taliban's school"). She opposed the 2003 invasion of Iraq. At the start of the war, she went to Baghdad to cover the bombing of that city, for which work she was awarded the title Cavaliere del Lavoro on her return to Italy.


Kidnapping
Sgrena was kidnapped outside Baghdad University by gunmen in February 2005. In an article from March 2003 she had spoken openly about her concern for the security situation in Baghdad and her fear of being kidnapped. Anti- activist reported that Sgrena was "fully aware" of but willing to take "tremendous risks" in order to document the war.

Sgrena defended her decision to risk being kidnapping as a necessary part of working as an unembedded reporter in a warzone. She points to her reporting on such critical incidents as the Second Battle of Fallujah, where, she argues, only unembedded reporters were able to report the level of destruction in the city and the ferocity of urban warfare, which according to her included the use of .

She was later shown in a video pleading that the demands of her kidnappers, the withdrawal of Italian troops from Iraq, be fulfilled. Her release was subsequently negotiated and she was freed on 4 March 2005. Italy allegedly paid $US6 million in ransom for her release.


Rescue
After being rescued by and another agent, Sgrena was being transported by car to Baghdad International Airport. However, a roadblock, put in place to protect 's car convoy, fired on the vehicle, causing the death of Calipari, and wounding Sgrena and the other agent, Andrea Carpani. Sgrena testified that US forces fired on the car without warning, and this incident caused strain in diplomatic relations between Italy and the United States. The U.S. soldiers claimed that they were duped into firing on the vehicle by an Al-Qaeda agent's false lead that a bomb was in the vehicle carrying Sgrena.

Sgrena has contradicted the US claims and has insisted that no warnings were given before the soldiers shot at their car. Sgrena said that out of 58 bullets fired at the car, 57 were fired at the passenger and only the last bullet was fired at the engine, which shows that the intention was not to stop the car.


Aftermath
Sgrena was awarded the Stuttgart peace prize in 2005. In a November 2005 documentary, Fallujah, The Hidden Massacre, Sgrena declared that the U.S. had used white phosphorus and napalm in during Operation Phantom Fury.

On 26 June 2006, Sgrena offered to meet with , the US National Guardsman who had shot at her car. Common Dreams


Selected works
  • "Alla scuola dei taleban", Editore (collana Talpa di biblioteca), 2002.
  • "Il fronte Iraq. Diario di una guerra permanente", Editore Manifestolibri (collana Talpa di biblioteca), 2004.
  • "Fuoco amico", Editore Feltrinelli (collana Serie bianca), 2005.
  • "Il prezzo del velo. La guerra dell'Islam contro le donne", Editore Feltrinelli (collana Serie bianca) 2008.


Footnotes

Sources

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