Agence France-Presse . Baghdad
The Iraqi journalist who became an instant media star for hurling his shoes at the US president, George W Bush, appeared on Wednesday before a judge investigating the incident, his brother said.
Muntazer al-Zaidi, 29, a television reporter who relatives and colleagues said acted because he ‘detested’ Bush and America, was brought before the judge in the high-security Green Zone in the heart of Baghdad, the brother said.
Durgham al-Zaidi said he and another brother were told by the investigating judge that Muntazar had ‘cooperated well,’ but that they were unable to attend the hearing and had no further details.
Under Iraqi law, Zaidi risks up to seven years in jail for ‘offending the head of a foreign state.’
Durgham said on Tuesday that his brother had been taken to the US-run Ibn Sina hospital in the Green Zone after being beaten by security guards and suffering a broken arm and ribs, as well as injuries to an eye and a leg.
He was unable to say whether Muntazer had sustained the injuries while being overpowered during Sunday’s protest or after his arrest, and there was no immediate information about the journalist’s condition on Wednesday.
Zaidi grabbed the world spotlight when he threw his shoes at Bush during a press conference and called him a dog during a farewell visit to Iraq by the US leader who ordered the invasion of the country in 2003.
Bush ducked both shoes while Zaidi, who works for private Iraqi television station Al-Baghdadia, was wrestled to the ground by guards after his action, regarded as the supreme mark of disrespect in the Muslim world.
To avoid a repeat of the drama, tight security measures were introduced at a press conference on Wednesday between the Iraqi prime minister, Nuri al-Maliki, and his counterpart Gordon Brown of Britain — Washington’s top ally in the war.
Extra security guards were brought in to monitor journalists, and anyone not appearing on a list of accredited reporters was barred, although no one was asked to remove their footwear.
Later, addressing British troops, he quipped: ‘I was going to say before I spoke that you should take off your shoes because the favourite thing in Iraq these days is to throw shoes at people.’
One of Zaidi’s colleagues said that he had asked the station to send three lawyers to defend him, but it was not known if anyone represented him at Wednesday’s hearing.
Saddam Hussein’s former lawyer Khalil al-Dulaimi said on Monday he was forming a team to defend Zaidi and that around 200 lawyers had offered their services for free.
The White House said on Tuesday it was for Iraqi leaders to decide whether to punish Zaidi, who relatives said had been arrested at the beginning of the year by US forces and was once kidnapped by militants and held for days.
‘I think the president believes that Iraq is a sovereign country, a democratic country, and they will have a process that they follow on this,’ spokeswoman Dana Perino said.
‘The president harbours no hard feelings about the incident. We’ve really moved on.’
Perino, who herself was sporting a bruise on her face from the shoe throwing, sought to downplay the incident.
‘I don’t think that you can take one guy throwing his shoe as representative of the people of Iraq,’ she said. ‘I know that there are people in Iraq who are angry, angry at their situation. It’s been a very rough five years.’
But she said Maliki and other Iraqi journalists ‘apologised on behalf of the Iraqis, saying this is not how they would treat a guest.’
The US State Department said Tuesday it would issue a condemnation if it were true that Zaidi had been beaten up.
Zaidi’s action won him widespread plaudits in the Arab world where Bush’s policies in Iraq as well as the broader Middle East and the US-led ‘war on terror’ have drawn deep hostility.
Iraqi reaction was mixed, however, with some considering the attack against a visiting head of state reflected badly on the country, while others considered it the ideal parting gift for an unpopular president.
In Beirut, university students threw footwear at an effigy of Bush before setting it on fire.
And in Lahore, Pakistan, around 150 journalists demonstrated outside a press club to demand the release of Zaidi.
Courtesy: newagebd.com