An explosion outside a village in southern Afghanistan killed a US Marine and a veteran war correspondent who became the first British journalist killed in the conflict, officials said.
With the death of Sunday Mirror journalist Rupert Hamer, 18 reporters have been killed in Afghanistan since the US-led invasion that followed the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks, figures kept by the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists showed.
“Tragically it was a matter of time,” former British forces commander Colonel Richard Kemp told Sky News television. “Our journalists, the same as other journalists, our British journalists deploying on operations with forces in Afghanistan or Iraq face exactly the same risks as our soldiers face out there.”
PHOTO: EPA
Hamer, 39, and photographer Philip Coburn, 43, were accompanying a US Marine patrol on Saturday when their vehicle was hit by a makeshift bomb near the village of Nawa in Helmand, the Defense Ministry said.
An US Marine was also killed in the blast, the ministry said.
Coburn was seriously wounded in the explosion but remains in stable condition, the military said.
The Defense Ministry originally said that an Afghan soldier had been killed in the attack, but later released a revised statement saying that “there were no Afghan nationals killed or injured in this incident.”
The statement cited new information gathered from the field, but gave no further details.
The statement also said that five Marines were left badly hurt.
It did not elaborate on their condition.
The past year has been particularly deadly for those fighting the war and those covering it.
Canadian journalist Michelle Lang died late last year while embedded with Canadian troops in Afghanistan.
An Afghan translator for the New York Times, Sultan Munadi, was killed in September during a rescue operation.
The Sunday Mirror said that Hamer and Coburn had flown to the region on New Year’s Eve and were embedded with the US military.
Their trip was to have lasted for a month, the paper said.
Both were veterans of reporting from conflict zones. It was Hamer’s fifth excursion to Afghanistan, while Coburn had previously reported from Afghanistan, Iraq and Rwanda.
“Rupert believed that the only place to report a war was from the front line, and as our defense correspondent he wanted to be embedded with the US Marines at the start of their vital surge into southern Afghanistan,” Sunday Mirror editor Tina Weaver said in a statement.
The Sun’s Tom Newton Dunn, who used to serve as the paper’s defense correspondent, said he and Hamer often spent time together in the field.
“He was extremely good at getting news and he really understood the armed forces,” Newton Dunn told the BBC. “And was never afraid to go out to places like Afghanistan or Iraq.”
Government officials lined up to offer their condolences.
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said Hamer and Coburn had brought “courage, skill and dedication to reporting from the front line,” something he said ensured that the world could see and read about what international forces were achieving in Afghanistan.
British Defense Minister Bob Ainsworth said the pair accompanied him on his most recent trip to Afghanistan and that he was “impressed by their hard work and professionalism.”
“My thoughts and deepest sympathies are with the families, friends and colleagues of both men at this extremely distressing time,” Ainsworth said.
Hamer is survived by his wife Helen and three young children, his newspaper said.
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