Australian journalist shot in war-torn Marawi

ABC journalist Adam Harvey wears a neckbrace inside a clinic at the Lanao Del Sur Provincial Capitol in Marawi, on the southern Philippine island of Mindanao on June 15, 2017.   A stray bullet hit Harvey's neck inside the Provincial Capitol. / AFP PHOTO / NOEL CELIS
ABC journalist Adam Harvey wears a neck brace inside a clinic at the Lanao Del Sur Provincial Capitol on June 15.  / AFP / Noel Celis

MARAWI, Philippines — An Australian television journalist was shot in the neck on Thursday as he reported from Marawi where Islamist militants are battling government troops, but he did not suffer major injuries.

Adam Harvey, a reporter for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, wrote on Twitter: “Lucky,” alongside an image of an X-ray showing the bullet lodged in his neck, close to his spine.

“Thanks everyone – I’m okay. Bullet is still in my neck, but it missed everything important,” he said in another Twitter post.

Harvey was inside the provincial capitol compound where local and foreign journalists have congregated during the more than three weeks of fighting in the city, the government’s crisis management committee spokesperson, Zia Alonto Adiong, told AFP.

Although the compound is secured by the military, it is only about two kilometers (1.2 miles) from the pockets of the city that the gunmen control.

“I want to appeal to everyone you should be very careful because in our assessment the vicinity of the 103rd (military camp), the vicinity of the capitol is within the line of sight of the enemy,” local military spokesperson Lieutenant-Colonel Jo-ar Herrera told reporters in the compound after the shooting incident.

Harvey was taken to the nearby city of Iligan for medical treatment, Adiong said.

At least 26 civilians and 58 security forces have died in the conflict, according to authorities. They say more than 200 militants have been killed. Agence France Presse