This Article is From Apr 10, 2016

Anti-ISIS Syrian Journalist 'Shot In Head' In Turkish City

Anti-ISIS Syrian Journalist 'Shot In Head' In Turkish City

ISIS has targeted journalists on several occasions. (File photo)

Highlights

  • Mohammed Zaher al-Shurqat is currently in intensive care in Turkey
  • It's reportedly the second attempt on his life in three months
  • He reportedly helped fight Syrian President's troops before leaving Syria
Istanbul: A Syrian journalist who opposed ISIS terror group was in intensive care Sunday after being shot in the head by a masked gunman in southern Turkey, reports and activists said.

Mohammed Zaher al-Shurqat was walking down a street in the southern Turkish city of Gaziantep close to the Syrian border when he was targeted by the gunman, the Dogan and Anatolia news agencies reported.

El-Shurqat worked for a channel called Aleppo Today TV which is strongly opposed to ISIS who have taken control of much of Syria's northern Aleppo province.

He was immediately hospitalised and is in intensive care, the Turkish reports said, without giving further details.

According to Ibrahim al-Idelbi, a Syrian activist in Gaziantep, this was the second attempt against Shurqat's life in three months.

Idelbi told Agence France-Presse in Beirut that Shurqat was a rebel commander who had fought President Bashar al-Assad's troops and a media activist in his home town, Al-Bab, until IS took over. He became a journalist with Aleppo Today after he moved to Turkey.

Citing a friend who visited Shurqat in hospital in the southern Turkish city, Idelbi said he was "still alive".

Another activist, Assaad al-Achi, confirmed the report. "When Daesh took control he started a programme on Aleppo Today against Daesh," he said, speaking to AFP via the Internet in English and using an Arabic acronym for ISIS.

Turkish police have studied security camera footage and interviewed witnesses and believe the shooting was carried out by a member of ISIS, Dogan added in its report.

Several Syrian journalists who fled the country's five year civil war use Gaziantep as a base but it has become an increasingly dangerous location from which to report.

A Syrian activist who produced documentaries hostile to the ISIS group, Naji Jerf, was shot dead in Gaziantep in December in a crime that caused international concern

At the end of October, ISIS claimed responsibility for killing young activist Ibrahim Abdelkader and his friend Fares Hamadi. They were found decapitated in a house in the city of Sanliurfa just east of Gaziantep.
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