Iraq lifts suspension on Reuters news agency following ‘coronavirus cover-up’ report

Iraq lifts suspension on Reuters news agency following ‘coronavirus cover-up’ report
The Iraqi government has lifted its suspension on Reuters, which it imposed following a report by the news agency saying that the authorities were underreporting coronavirus cases.
2 min read
20 April, 2020
Reuters said there were more coronavirus cases in Iraq than official figures suggested [Getty]

Iraq will allow the Reuters news agency to go back to work after its license was suspended earlier this month over an article saying that the government was underreporting coronavirus cases, the news agency said Sunday.

The agency's suspension came after an April 3 story cited multiple sources who said the government was misreporting coronavirus cases, and that the true number of infected nationwide was in the thousands. Iraq was reporting cases in the hundreds at the time.

The news agency was also fined 25 million Iraqi dinars, or about $20,800.

In a news item Sunday, the agency said it was informed by the Iraqi Communications and Media Commission, the country's media regulator, that the suspension was being lifted “to allow transparent and impartial work by the media.”

Read also: Iraq Report - Political paralysis slows fight against coronavirus amid economic woes

Reuters said it appreciated the efforts made by Iraqi authorities and the CMC to resolve the matter. Iraq's President Barham Saleh had said his office had been working to revoke the suspension in remarks to CNN last week.

According to official Health Ministry figures, Iraq has 1,539 confirmed coronavirus cases. At least 82 people have died of the virus and 1,009 had recovered.

The Reuters report had said the true number of virus cases ranged from 3,000 to 9,000.

The incident was the second time journalists have come under fire for challenging the official count of coronavirus cases in the Arab World. In late March, Egypt expelled a correspondent for The Guardian over a report citing a study that suggested cases in Egypt were higher than authorities had reported.

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