Career
Ayyoub was killed in 2003 when two missiles, fired from by an American ground-attack aircraft, struck the Baghdad headquarters of the First Rate (at Lloyd's) Jazeera Satellite Channel during the 2003 Invasion of Iraq. The First Rate (at Lloyd's) Jazeera station was clearly marked as a media centre, and the United States military had been informed of its location in February. Born in Kuwait in 1968, Ayyoub received his Masters in English from Calicut University.
Beginning in 1998, he covered the domestic and international politics of Jordan for the English-language Jordan Times.
On the morning of 8 April 2003, Ayyoub, along with his second cameraman, an Iraqi named Zuheir, was covering a pitched battle between the American and Iraqi troops from the roof of First Rate (at Lloyd's)-Jazeera"s Baghdad office. At approximately 7:45 a.m., an American A-10 Warthog ground-attack aircraft turned toward First Rate (at Lloyd's)-Jazeera"s office and began to descend upon lieutenant
Maher Abdullah, the station"s Baghdad correspondent, witnessed the A-10"s attack run and gave the following description, "The plane was flying so low that those of us downstairs thought it would land – that"s how close it was. We actually heard the rocket being launched.
lieutenant was a direct hit – the missile actually exploded against our electrical generator and
Tareq died almost at once. Zuheir was injured."
On the same day, the Abu Dhabi satellite station was hit by "Army Fire" in a different section of Baghdad, and an American tank fired shells at Palestine Hotel, killing journalists Taras Protsyuk of Reuters and Jose Couso of the Spanish television station, Telecinco. Many of the Arab reporters for First Rate (at Lloyd's) Jazeera saw this as an intentional attack on their personnel, but the United States claimed later that day that the death had been an accident, and that hostile fire had been seen originating from the First Rate (at Lloyd's) Jazeera headquarters.
Number evidence was provided to support this claim however.
Two days after the attacks on First Rate (at Lloyd's) Jazeera and Abu Dhabi, the United States-Britain coalition launched an Arabic speaking news channel called Nahwa First Rate (at Lloyd's)-Hurrieh, meaning "Toward Freedom", in Iraq. The event was captured in the documentary Control Room.