Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

John Pilger: Journalist who exposed the ugly truth behind ‘US-UK’ wars

- &Ј ΀ϓ͓ΐ΀Ј o˪ЈЀ˪π̛

John Pilger, who has died of pulmonary fibrosis aged 84, was a journalist who never shirked from saying the unsayable. Across half a century, in newspapers and in his documentar­y films – many for ITV, but later also in the cinema – he became an ever stronger voice for those without a voice, and a thorn in the side of those in authority.

He was a fervent critic of US and British foreign policy. In 2006, on a panel at Columbia University, New York, to discuss Breaking the Silence: War, Lies and Empire, Pilger asserted that “journalist­s in the so-called mainstream bear much of the responsibi­lity” for the devastatio­n and lives lost in Iraq, by not challengin­g and exposing “the lies of Bush and Blair”.

The impact of Pilger’s journalism was enormous. In 1979, he entered Cambodia after the Vietnamese had thrown out Pol Pot and the murderous Khmer Rouge. In a report that took up much of the first half of the Daily Mirror, he revealed that possibly more than two million people, from a population of seven million, had died as a result of genocide or starvation, while another two million faced death from food shortages or disease.

Haunting images of emaciated children, and doctors battling to save lives, were subsequent­ly seen in Pilger’s documentar­y Year Zero: The Silent Death of Cambodia, which was watched in 50 countries by 150 million viewers, and won more than 30 internatio­nal awards.

Displaying his talent for putting a human tragedy into a political context, he laid part of the blame on the US, which had secretly and illegally bombed Cambodia, creating the turmoil that allowed Pol Pot to seize power. Also, said Pilger, western government­s were unwilling to give substantia­l aid to those now running Cambodia for fear of displeasin­g the US, which had been defeated in the Vietnam war only four years earlier.

Pilger’s reporting helped to raise $45m in relief and earned him a second journalist of the year title in the British Press Awards (the previous one was for his dispatches from Vietnam) and the United Nations media peace prize. Over the next decade, he continued to return to Cambodia and report on the power politics. He himself survived an ambush after being put on a Khmer Rouge death list.

From his first ITV documentar­y, in 1970, Pilger made waves. In The Quiet Mutiny, for Granada Television’s World in Action current affairs series, he broke the story of the disintegra­tion of morale among US troops in the Vietnam war – and reported that some officers were being killed by their own soldiers.

Following a complaint by the US ambassador in London, the ITA – then commercial television’s regulator – rapped Granada over the knuckles, setting the tone for future battles with Pilger over questions of balance and impartiali­ty.

His ITV series Pilger (1974-77), made by ATV, looked into many controvers­ial subjects in Britain, Pilger’s adopted country after he left his native Australia in 1962. He reported on 98 uncompensa­ted thalidomid­e victims, NHS cuts, racism, poverty and the treatment of children with learning disabiliti­es. Abroad, he went undercover to interview Czech dissidents.

Pilger was one of the first journalist­s to return to Vietnam after the war, and among his other films of the period were Do You Remember Vietnam (1978), and Heroes (1981), for which he took five disabled American war veterans back to former combat zones to reflect on what he described as a war fought “in the cause of nothing”.

However, his claims in Cambodia: The Betrayal (1990) about the SAS training Khmer Rouge guerrillas in the 1980s led Pilger and Central to lose a libel action.

Many of his documentar­ies exposed human rights abuses. At great personal risk, Pilger and his regular director, David Munro, entered countries run by military dictatorsh­ips. In Death of a Nation: The Timor Conspiracy (1994), he interviewe­d eyewitness­es to genocide by the occupying Indonesian regime in East Timor and revealed an unreported massacre. In Inside Burma: Land of Fear (1998), he uncovered the generals’ torture.

For Apartheid Did Not Die (1998), Pilger interviewe­d Nelson Mandela and caused discomfort to both white and black South Africans by describing a new “economic apartheid” that kept many black people in poverty.

He explored UN sanctions on Iraq in the decade before the US-led invasion in Paying the Price: Killing the Children of Iraq (2000), globalisat­ion in The New Rulers of the World (2001) and the Middle East in Palestine Is Still the Issue (2002).

When Pilger made Breaking the Silence: Truth and Lies in the War on Terror (2003), he unravelled the background to 9/11 and the invasion of Afghanista­n, highlighti­ng “hypocrisy” by the US and British government­s. He opened with the words: “This film is about the rise and rise of rapacious imperial power and a terrorism that never speaks its name because it is our terrorism.”

Similar themes emerged in The War on Democracy (2007), about US interferen­ce in Latin American countries, and The War You Don’t See (2010), a chronicle of reporting from the frontline made with the director Alan Lowery, another regular collaborat­or. “Why do many journalist­s beat the drums of war regardless of the lies of government­s?” Pilger asked.

Later, his focus was on a country deemed by the US to be a threat to its global power in The Coming War on China (2016) and starved resources and creeping privatisat­ion in The Dirty War on the National Health Service (2019).

Among more than 60 documentar­ies, Pilger also made Stealing a Nation (2004), on the British government expelling the population of the Chagos Islands, in the Indian Ocean, in the 60s so that the US could set up a military base there.

But a constant subject of Pilger’s films over almost 40 years, beginning in 1976, was his homeland and the treatment of Indigenous Australian­s. Most significan­tly, he made The Secret Country: The First Australian­s Fight Back (1985), the bicentenar­y trilogy The Last Dream (1988) and Utopia (2013), telling the story of his greatgrand­parents’ arrival in Australia as convicts, Aboriginal poverty and deaths in police custody, and the stolen generation­s of mixed-heritage children taken from their families.

Pilger was born in Sydney, to Elsie (nee Marheine), a teacher, and Claude Pilger, a carpenter. He attended Sydney Boys’ high school and won medals as a swimmer. In 1958 he joined Australian Consolidat­ed Press, working on the Sydney Sun, and then the Daily and Sunday Telegraph.

He freelanced in Italy before moving to Britain in 1962 and becoming a subeditor with the Reuters news agency. A year later, he joined the Daily Mirror as a subeditor, then a reporter noted for his investigat­ive journalism, descriptiv­e writing and tireless campaigns.

Roaming the world, he was banned from South Africa by the apartheid regime in 1967 and was standing metres away when Robert F Kennedy was assassinat­ed in Los Angeles the following year. He left the Mirror in 1985 and wrote for other papers, including the Guardian. He was a supporter of the WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.

The ferocity of rightwing criticism of his views indicated the effectiven­ess of his journalism.

Among dozens of honours, Pilger received an Emmy for Cambodia: The Betrayal, and, in 1991, Bafta’s Richard Dimbleby award.

His 1971 marriage to the journalist Scarth Flett ended in divorce. He is survived by his partner of more than 30 years, Jane Hill, a magazine journalist, a son, Sam, from his marriage, and a daughter, Zoe, from a relationsh­ip with the journalist Yvonne Roberts.

John Richard Pilger, journalist and documentar­y-maker, born October 9, 1939; died December 30, 2023.

 ?? / AFP ?? Australian journalist John Pilger speaks during a picnic in Parliament Square, central London on July 3, 2021, to mark Wikileaks founder Julian Assange’s 50th birthday.
/ AFP Australian journalist John Pilger speaks during a picnic in Parliament Square, central London on July 3, 2021, to mark Wikileaks founder Julian Assange’s 50th birthday.

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