From The New York Times - 6 March 2005Italian Journalist Shot in Iraq Rejects U.S.
          Account
          By JASON
          HOROWITZ   
          
          ROME, March 6 - The Italian reporter wounded when American troops opened fire on the
          car carrying her and Italian secret service officers to the Baghdad airport just hours
          after her release from kidnappers rejected today the United States' version of the
          incident and refused to rule out that she was intentionally targeted. 
          "The fact that the Americans don't want negotiations to free the hostages is
          known," Ms. Sgrena said in a telephone interview with Sky TG24 television. "The
          fact that they do everything to prevent the adoption of this practice to save the lives of
          people held hostages, everybody knows that. So I don't see why I should rule out that I
          could have been the target." 
          The White House called the shooting a "horrific accident" and promised a full
          investigation. 
          Ms. Sgrena, a 56-year-old reporter for the communist daily Il Manifesto was hit with shrapnel in the shoulder in
          the shooting Friday night at a checkpoint in western Baghdad. An Italian intelligence
          agent, Nicola Calipari, tried to shield her from the bullets and was killed. Mr.
          Calipari's body was flown to Italy late Saturday, and today lay in state at Rome's
          Vittoriano monument, where hundreds of Italians filed by, paying their respects. 
          "I remember only fire," Ms. Sgrena wrote in today's issue of Il Manifesto.
          "At that point a rain of fire and bullets came at us, forever silencing the happy
          voices from a few minutes earlier." 
          While Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, a staunch ally of President Bush, has demanded
          an explanation for the shooting, other government officials indicated that the incident
          would not threaten the mission of its roughly 3,000 troops stationed in Iraq. 
          "The military mission must carry on because it consolidates democracy and liberty
          in Iraq,'" Communications Minister Maurizio Gasparri told ANSA, an Italian news
          agency. "On the other hand, we must control - but not block - the presence of
          civilians and journalists, who must observe rules and behavior to reduce the risks." 
          In the days and hours following the shooting, United States officials, from the
          American ambassador in Rome, to Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, to President Bush
          expressed regret and condolences for the shooting. But questions immediately arose over
          whether the shooting would strain relations for the two allies. 
          "The incident could have very serious political consequences," Italy's La
          Stampa daily said in a front page editorial, adding that relations between the two
          governments had "suffered an immediate deterioration." 
          Members of Italy's center-left coalition said that if what they considered Mr.
          Berlusconi's deference to the United States continued following Friday's shooting, he
          risked losing popular support in Italy, which was overwhelmingly against the war in Iraq. 
          "Berlusconi could be weakened by a weak position toward America," said Paolo
          Gentiloni, a center-left member of the lower house of parliament. "The fact that we
          are allied doesn't mean that we can forget what happened. The fact that the situation
          there is very dangerous, cannot justify what happened." 
          The American military said the car carrying Ms. Sgrena and the Italian agents was
          speeding to the airport as it approached a checkpoint. Soldiers shot into the engine block
          after trying to warn the driver to stop by "by hand-and-arm signals, flashing white
          lights, and firing warning shots in front of the car," a statement said. 
          But Ms. Sgrena refuted that account, telling the Italian television channel La 7,
          "There was no bright light, no signal." She added that the car was traveling at
          "regular speed." 
          Ms. Sgrena was abducted on Feb. 4 in Baghdad after conducting several hours of
          interviews with refugees from the decimated city of Falluja. 
          Gunmen pulled up in front of her car as she was leaving and dragged her into their
          vehicle. Her Iraqi employees managed to escape.  
          Two weeks later, Ms. Sgrena's captors released a video showing her tearfully pleading
          for her life and asking for the withdrawal of all the American-led forces. The words
          "Mujahedeen Without Borders," presumably the name of the group holding her,
          appeared in digital red Arabic script on a backdrop. 
          Days after that video was released, tens of thousands of Italians marched through Rome
          demanding that she be returned. 
          Agriculture Minister Giovanni Alemanno was quoted as saying it was "very
          likely" a ransom had been paid for Ms. Sgrena's release. Ms. Sgrena told reporters
          that she did not know if a ransom had been paid, but she had said that her captors
          "never treated me badly." 
          Nevertheless, Ms. Sgrena told Sky TG24 that "I will not return to Iraq." Her
          captors, she said, had made it clear that "they do not want witnesses and we are all
          perceived as possible spies." 
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