Two Western Journalists Killed in Syria

A U.S. and a French journalist were killed in the central Syrian city of Homs today, the 19th day of intense shelling by the forces of President Bashar al-Assad bent on quashing a growing opposition.

The deaths of American Marie Colvin and Frechman Remi Ochlik were confirmed by French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe. They come less than a week after New York Times correspondent Anthony Shadid died in northern Syria from an apparent asthma attack and a day after well-known Syrian opposition Rami al-Sayed journalist died in Homs.

A Long Island native, Colvin wrote for the British Sunday Times. Like Shadid, she was considered one of the best foreign correspondents in the world, covering global conflicts for decades. Ochlik was a freelance photographer who recently won a 2012 World Press Photo prize for a photo from the Libyan revolution.

In a statement, the editor of the Sunday Times called Colvin an "extraordinary figure."

"She believed profoundly that reporting could curtail the excesses of brutal regimes and make the international community take notice," John Witherow wrote. "Above all, as we saw in her powerful report last weekend, her thoughts were with the victims of violence."

Colvin and Ochlik were in a house in the Baba Amr neighborhood of Homs, the district hit hardest by what residents have described as almost three weeks of relentless shelling that has left hundreds dead. Video posted to YouTube purported to show their bodies in a house destroyed by tank shelling.

Activists say 10 Syrians were also killed and three other journalists were injured, including Colvin's photographer Paul Conroy, who the Times believes is "not too seriously hurt."

Colvin filed a report for the BBC Tuesday, saying Baba Amr and its residents are besieged. "It's absolutely sickening," she said. "The Syrians will not let them out, and are shelling all the civilian areas.

"There's just shells, rockets and tank fire pouring into civilian areas of this city. It is just unrelenting."

Colvin lost an eye from a shrapnel wound in Sri Lanka in 2001, an injury that she said "is worth it" in a 2010 speech on the dangers of conflict reporting.

"Covering a war means going to places torn by chaos, destruction, and death ... and trying to bear witness," she said at a memorial for fallen journalists.

"Someone has to go there and see what is happening. You can't get that information without going to places where people are being shot at, and others are shooting at you."

Covering Syria's 11-month-long uprising has been a difficult task for journalists, who have been granted little access to the country. For several weeks in late December and January during an Arab League observer mission, the Assad regime granted media visas to numerous media outlets. But as the violence has gotten worse in recent weeks, legal access to the country has been virtually non-existent.

In a speech, Assad criticized the December exclusive ABC News interview Barbara Walters conducted with him, citing it as an example of international media bias. ABC News' request for new visas has gone unanswered.

So a handful of news organizations have taken great risks in sneaking into cities like Homs and Idlib in the north to witness the widespread crackdowns and growing armed resistance by defected soldiers and civilians.

There was an immediate outpouring of grief from fellow journalists after news of the deaths. A close friend of Colvin's for more than two decades, ABC News Middle East producer Nasser Atta remembered her unrelenting dedication to the story.

"She always believed that the people are the real heroes and her mission was to cover those people," Atta said. "She was always in the middle of it, whether it was Gaza, Beirut, Baghdad, Cairo or anywhere else."

"She had only one loyalty in her entire life and that was to transfer what she saw into words …i t was always sharp and powerful."

ABC News' Christiane Amanpour, who exclusively interviewed the late Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi alongside Colvin last February, called the loss of Colvin "agonizing."

"A veteran, a lioness who came back from being wounded in Sri Lanka," Amanpour said. "She seemed indestructible; she was brave and committed beyond words."

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  • Pathdoc  •  2 months ago
    Brainwashing and Propaganda is rampant in the Western media.

    Iraq has WMD's and is intimate with Al qaeda
    ( 1 MILLION innocent Iraqi's die)
    Now

    Iran has Nuclear Weapons and is intimate with Al qaeda
    How many Iranian innocent MILLIONS will die??

    Then
    Threat of COMMUNISM
    4 MILLION innocent Vietnamese men women and children murdered
    Vietnam is still Communist
    Why were the 4 MILLION murdered?

    TODAY
    Iranian bases around US or Israel - ZERO
    US bases all around Iran - 45
    Brainwashing and Propaganda in Western Media says
    Iran THREATENS US
    How many Iranian MILLIONS will die?

    Only the most supreme of EVIL uses HATE and FEAR to kill MILLIONS of innocent people
    STOP THE GREAT SATAN and SAVE MILLIONS of innocent lives
    No more Afghanistan to Vietnam
    STOP the brainwashed americans filled with Hate and Violence from launching more Wars.
    • Thom 2 months ago
      Death to democrats, liberal/progressive, national socialists(nazis), "obamapigs" on Wallstreet, d-baggers! Death to islam!
    • Old Goat 2 months ago
      Have either of you taken your medication lately? if not... YOU NEED TO
  • curious  •  2 months ago
    Stay out of this. Let Arabs and Muslims sort things internally and at their own expense!
    • Hafiza 2 months ago
      There is A LOT that can be done by working with other countries in the region, especially Turkey. The USA does not have to "send in the troops", etc. What would be wrong, wrong, wrong is to pretend that "nothing" is going on, and that the USA is not a part of this world we all live in.
    • HMCS 2 months ago
      Should we call Syria to deal with Turkey when Turkey bomb and shell kurds?
    • pajaru 2 months ago
      There is A LOT that can be done to improve and strengthen our own country.
  • Hi  •  Portland, Oregon  •  2 months ago
    Wow I just saw this woman on tv the other day talking about that baby that was hit by a shell and it died after the video of it fighting to breathe. The woman had guts is all I can say, makes me wonder if Bashar saw it too and diecided to get even.
  • Red Beard  •  Branson, Missouri  •  2 months ago
    Sad to see REAL journalists die in pursuit of their story. They are the last of a dying bred. What we have now are pseudo-journalists that get their stories off of the internet and take whatever government officials tell them as the truth without investigating
    • TLMF 2 months ago
      Pursuit of truth or propaganda. Whatever.
    • dr 2 months ago
      Exactly. These journalists were there to help galvanize support for foreign intervention to put these terrorist forces into power. Syria will prevail!
    • Hafiza 2 months ago
      There is A LOT that can be done by working with other countries in the region, especially Turkey. The USA does not have to "send in the troops", etc. What would be wrong, wrong, wrong is to pretend that "nothing" is going on, and that the USA is not a part of this world we all live in. Our relationship with all the other countries on the planet is NOT just based on how much $$$ can we make off of trade, their resources and their cheap labor force. There is a lot more to all countries living peacefully together on this planet than that.
  • Centrist  •  2 months ago
    ......THIS JUST IN.......
    War is Hell......
    • Nel 2 months ago
      Listening to Coldplay is hell.
  • Independent Bear  •  Newport, Oregon  •  2 months ago
    Those journalists are why we know about the killing. They are truly heroes. Had we known nearly as much about what was happening in Europe in 1939, many millions of innocent people might have been saved.
    • Tom 2 months ago
      Not heroes at all.
    • michael minor 2 months ago
      very tru..can be said of the Vietnam War/Conflict..it was covered sooo well by the news media..as w/ these journalists..there was Dan Rather and etc etc, right there getting shot at...on film.
    • TM 2 months ago
      Well said.
  • Dieter  •  St Louis, Missouri  •  2 months ago
    The news media would sacrifice their families if it would be news worthy. News Media - Islamic Extremists, there is no difference. Is getting the news really that important that human sacrifices need to be made?
  • JohnS  •  Newark, United Kingdom  •  2 months ago
    I dont wish to be disrespectful but we lost one of our Gurkhas recently in a fire fight in Afganistan. He got about 2 mins on the news. This woman got half an hour yesterday and they we still talking about her today. These people go into war zones risking their lives for the 'story' with pulitzer prizes in their eyes. Then when they get kidnapped its real soldiers that have to go in and risk their lives to rescue them. How many British and American soldiers, marines and special forces have been killed or wounded protecting these people or getting them out of harms way? I would guess quite a few. R.I.P marie but i hope other journos learn from this
  • Overthehill  •  2 months ago
    Too sad.
  • Mighty American  •  Boone, Iowa  •  2 months ago
    I have read the 13 comments so far, most are sadistic blatterers and have most likely never believed in anything strong enough to hang with it at all costs. This person had that courage, that iron will to do the right thing...not for herself...but for those who have to endure such times. She continued to go to such places because she wanted the world to know that a genocide was going on. Now I point the finger at all of YOU! Do you have such a strong will? Would you do something this dangerous just because you believe it is the right thing to do? IF not then be quiet. Do not disrespect a heros death. A hero is someone who knows the chances are poor, but understands ....It must be done....and does it.

    To disrespect someone like this is showing what type of creature you are.
  • Jason  •  2 months ago
    A brave and wonderful person killed by senseless violence fueled by greed and power. Rest in peace.
  • JR-Texas  •  2 months ago
    In an bombardment everyone in the target area is the same to the cannons. It's valiant and brave but also risky as hell for journalists to be there. Sad, but it's an outcome of being in the killing fields in the middle east.
  • dacopper  •  San Francisco, California  •  2 months ago
    What ones are called "activists" in Syria, others are labeled "terrorists" in Afghanistan or Iraq. Only a matter of perspective and which group the US sides with.
  • Fed Up With Washington  •  Yüregir, Turkey  •  2 months ago
    Well boo-hoo-hoo. At least they had a choice of where to be, unlike so many civilians caught up in the U.N. tolerated fiasco.
  • David  •  2 months ago
    I'll bet she was One Tough Dame!!!
    We need more like her.
  • brian l  •  Minneapolis, Minnesota  •  2 months ago
    I think Amanpour should go over there.
  • A PT always  •  2 months ago
    It's sad ... yet fascinating to watch worldwide - what governments do to citizens. If you think YOUR government is different - you might just experience otherwise someday. Remember that. And yet, the obeisant elect their Masters, carry the yoke and do, as they are told ... or else! Mind-boggling!
  • Billy B  •  2 months ago
    Reporters don't dig foxholes anymore?
  • Ronald  •  Dallas, Texas  •  2 months ago
    At least some people have the courage and desire to tell us what's going on in these insane times. A awful loss. Thanks for your sacrafice dear lady.
  • bill  •  Riverview, Florida  •  2 months ago
    Pull out dummies