Spanish diplomat gunned down in Baghdad street ( 2003-10-10 09:48) (Agencies)
Gunmen killed a Spanish diplomat in Baghdad on
Thursday, shooting him down in the street as he fled his home in just bare feet
and undershorts.
The Spanish Foreign Ministry said Jose Antonio Bernal was killed near his
home in the upmarket Mansur neighborhood, location of many embassies and homes
of diplomats, having opened the door to one of his attackers.
The gunmen had chased him for 50 yards firing their pistols. One of them
appeared to be a cleric.
The chilling assassination raised new questions over security in Baghdad as
the suburb is one of the most heavily patrolled and protected in the city.
Bernal, 34, was an air force sergeant working for intelligence services at
the Spanish embassy. He was married with a daughter.
The motive for the shooting was unclear. Spain backed the U.S.-led war on
Iraq and has since sent troops to the country to help restore order, but Foreign
Minister Ana Palacio said there was no confirmation he was attacked because of
his nationality.
"There is a piece of evidence that has to be analyzed and that is that he
opened the door to his attacker and so he must have known him. He is not someone
who would have opened the door to just anybody," Palacio told Spanish state
radio.
Witnesses said three men pulled up in a brown car outside the diplomat's
two-storey house, surrounded by a two-meter (6-1/2 foot) high white wall, at
about 7:30 a.m., about 30 minutes before Bernal would normally leave to walk to
the nearby embassy.
They said one was wearing a black turban and appeared to be a Shi'ite cleric.
The other two pointed pistols at several unarmed security guards and threatened
to kill them if they interfered.
"The cleric knocked on the gate and the diplomat opened it," said Adeeb
Mustafa, a mechanic who saw the incident. The men with pistols positioned
themselves on either side of the gate.
"(The Spaniard) was barefoot, wearing only his undershorts. As soon as he saw
the cleric, he pushed him and ran to his left down the street."
DEADLY CHASE
A security guard at a school on the same secluded street said the men pursued
Bernal for nearly 50 yards.
"They chased him down the road firing their pistols at him all the time,"
Ahmed Ismael said.
Bernal was just 10 yards from reaching a busy highway where he might have
found safety when he was shot.
"One bullet struck him in the head and he collapsed on the street. The three
men jumped back into the car and sped away."
Spain has about 1,300 troops in Iraq, mostly concentrated in Shi'ite Muslim
areas south of Baghdad.
The Spanish government of Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar has been an
unflagging supporter of President Bush on Iraq and is scheduled to host a donors
conference on Iraq in Madrid in two weeks.
The slain diplomat's father, also named Jose Antonio Bernal, told Spanish
state radio: "I am very sad, immensely sad, but I also have the satisfaction
that he died in an act of service."
Madrid's Foreign Ministry described Bernal as an information attache working
for Spain's National Intelligence Center. The Defense Ministry said he was a
first sergeant of the air force attached to the embassy.
A Foreign Ministry statement said Bernal had worked in Iraq for two years
"and maintained an ample network of personal contacts necessary for properly
performing his job.
"Mr Bernal apparently recognized some of the people who showed up at his
residence when he opened the door," it said.
The United Nations in Baghdad has been hit twice by suicide bombers. An
attack on August 19 killed 22 people including the top U.N. diplomat in Iraq. A
truck bomb at the Jordanian embassy on August 7 killed at least 17 people.
About two hours after Bernal's killing, a suicide bomber attacked a police
station in a poor Shi'ite area of the capital, killing at least nine people
including himself.
Spanish embassy staff were sent home shortly after the attack on their
colleague, a security guard said.