Relatives of journalist Marie Colvin sue Syria for her death

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Relatives of Marie Colvin, a U.S.-born journalist who worked for the British newspaper The Sunday Times, have filed a lawsuit in federal court claiming that Syrian government officials targeted and killed her in 2012 to silence her reporting on Syria and the besieged city of Homs.

FILE - This file picture taken on Thursday, April. 24, 2014 and provided by the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), U.N relief workers with blue helmets and vests stand next of residents of the besieged Palestinian camp of Yarmouk, right, who stand in line to receive aid food distributed by UNRWA, on the southern edge of the Syrian capital Damascus, Syria. An international advocacy group accused the United Nations of not being neutral in the Syrian conflict in a trenchant report on Wednesday, June 15, 2016, claiming the world body is prioritizing its relationship with the Damascus government over delivering aid to civilians. (AP Photo/UNRWA, File )
FILE – This file picture taken on Thursday, April. 24, 2014 and provided by the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), U.N relief workers with blue helmets and vests stand next of residents of the besieged Palestinian camp of Yarmouk, right, who stand in line to receive aid food distributed by UNRWA, on the southern edge of the Syrian capital Damascus, Syria. An international advocacy group accused the United Nations of not being neutral in the Syrian conflict in a trenchant report on Wednesday, June 15, 2016, claiming the world body is prioritizing its relationship with the Damascus government over delivering aid to civilians. (Image Courtesy:AP)

The lawsuit says Syrian officials launched a rocket attack on a makeshift broadcast studio in a neighborhood of Homs. Colvin, a veteran correspondent for The Sunday Times, died in that attack along with French photo journalist Remi Ochlik.

Colvin, 56, a native of New York City, was killed Feb. 22, 2012. Just hours before her death, she filed another report on the Syrian government’s crackdown and its impact on civilians. The attack by Syrian army forces also killed several activists.

The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists said at the time that circumstantial evidence and witnesses pointed to the possibility that government forces had taken deliberate action that led to the deaths of Colvin and Ochlik. More than two dozen journalists were reported killed in Syria in 2012 alone.

The wrongful-death lawsuit filed Saturday in Washington by the Center for Justice and Accountability on behalf of Cathleen Colvin, Marie Colvin’s sister, and Justine Araya-Colvin, the reporter’s niece, said the Assad regime “hunted down journalists and media activists” who were trying to tell the story of the government’s deadly crackdown on Syrian rebels. The government has contended that its attacks targeted terrorists.

The lawsuit, which seeks compensatory and punitive damages, said there were no lawful military targets in the vicinity of the media center at the time of the attack and no armed rebels were present in or around the center. The occupants targeted by the Assad regime were unarmed civilians, the suit claims.

(Sourced from Agencies, Feature Image Courtesy:dbsjeyaraj.com)

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