Tamer Abdel-Raouf's death brings to five the number of journalists who have died in the past week of violence in Egypt.
The military initially said that Abdel-Raouf from the Al-Ahram newspaper sped through a checkpoint yesterday evening after a nighttime curfew began, and that soldiers fired warning shots before shooting at the car. It said the military did not deliberately shoot to kill.
However, Shaimaa Abu Elkhir of the Committee to Protect Journalists quoted a witness who was in the car with Abdel-Raouf as saying there were no warning shots and the incident took place an hour before the 7 pm start of the military-imposed curfew yesterday.
The shot "was targeted at his head, but it is not clear why," Abu Elkhir said. "If they car wanted to stop the car, they could have fired at the tires."
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The two journalists had just finished a meeting with the recently appointed governor of Beheira province, northwest of Cairo.
Paris-based Reporters Without Borders urged the military to respect rules of curfew in force that exempt health professionals and journalists and allow them to freely move at night. However, many journalists have complained that the armed forces and police are not respecting this exemption.