Vancouver Sun

ARMY TARGETS, KILLS JOURNALIST­S

World must redouble efforts to stop ‘ despicable campaign of terror,’ British foreign secretary says

- BY GORDON RAYNER, NABILA RAMDANI AND RICHARD SPENCER

Marie Colvin, the famed war correspond­ent killed by Syrian troops on Wednesday, was specifical­ly targeted after the Assad government ordered the murder of Western journalist­s, war correspond­ents and senior politician­s claim.

President Bashar Assad’s army was so determined to silence journalist­s who were telling the world about the relentless killing of civilians in the besieged city of Homs that they pledged to “kill any journalist who set foot on Syrian soil.”

Colvin, 56, died with a French photograph­er, 28- year- old Remi Ochlik, when they were fired on as they tried to flee a makeshift press centre that had just suffered a direct hit from a shell. Witnesses said they were killed by a rocket- propelled grenade as they emerged from the ruins of the press centre, which was next door to a hospital.

Frederic Mitterrand, the French culture minister, said they had been “pursued as they tried to flee the bombardmen­t.”

Before the building was attacked, Syrian army officers were allegedly intercepte­d by intelligen­ce staff in neighbouri­ng Lebanon discussing how they would claim journalist­s had been killed in crossfire with “terrorist groups.”

The deaths of the two journalist­s prompted an internatio­nal outcry. Colvin, who has reported from the world’s hot spots for 30 years, was working for Britain’s Sunday Times, but had become a key source of informatio­n for many news outlets as one of the few journalist­s in Homs, where the rebel- held Baba Amr neighbourh­ood has been pounded for 19 straight days by tank, artillery and mortar fire.

William Hague, Britain’s foreign secretary, said government­s around the world had to “redouble our efforts to stop the Assad regime’s despicable campaign of terror,” while Nicolas Sarkozy, the French president, said: “Enough is enough. This regime must go.”

Hours before she died, Colvin had given interviews to several broadcaste­rs, including the BBC, Channel 4 and CNN in which she described the bloodshed as “absolutely sickening.”

She also accused Assad’s forces of “murder” and said it was “a complete and utter lie that they are only targeting

Developmen­ts

Other news from Syria Wednesday • Syrian opposition groups said at least 24 civilians died in the assault on Homs on Wednesday and a total of 68 across the country. • The opposition Syrian National Council said it was coming to the conclusion outside military interventi­on was the “only solution” to the crisis. Bassma Kodmani, a senior figure in the SNC, suggested her group was close to abandoning its opposition to such action. “We are really close to seeing this military interventi­on as the only solution. There are two evils, military interventi­on or protracted civil war.” • The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said 7,636 people had been killed since antiregime protests erupted last March, including 5,542 civilians. • Activists claimed troops and militia loyal to President Bashar Assad’s government had summarily executed 27 young men on Tuesday in northern villages. Several videos posted on Youtube showed the bodies in the street with bullet wounds to the head or chest and hands tied. The videos could not be independen­tly confirmed. terrorists … the Syrian army is simply shelling a city of cold, starving civilians.”

And she described watching the agonizing death of a young boy who had been hit by shrapnel Tuesday and whom doctors, lacking equipment and supplies, could not help.

Sources in Damascus confirmed that Syrians, including Assad, would have been able to watch Colvin’s broadcasts — a fact that could have sealed her fate.

Jean- Pierre Perrin, a journalist for the Paris- based Liberation newspaper who was with Colvin in Homs last week, said they had been told the Syrian army was deliberate­ly going to shell their media centre, which had a limited electricit­y supply and Internet access thanks to a generator.

“A few days ago we were advised to leave the city urgently and we were told ‘ if they [ the Syrian army] find you they will kill you,’ ” Perrin said. “I then left the city with [ Colvin] but she wanted to go back when she saw that the major offensive had not yet taken place.”

Perrin, who went to Beirut from Homs, said the Syrians were “fully aware” that the press centre was broadcasti­ng direct evidence of crimes against humanity, including the murdering of women and children.

“The Syrian army issued orders to ‘ kill any journalist that set foot on Syrian soil,’ ” he said.

In Beirut, he was told about the intercepte­d radio traffic and said it was clear that Assad’s forces knew that there would be “no more informatio­n coming out of Homs” if they destroyed the press centre. A video posted on Youtube by opposition fighters purported to show the aftermath of the attack, with two unidentifi­ed bodies lying in a pile of rubble.

Reporters working in Homs, which has been under siege since Feb. 4, had become concerned in recent days that Syrian forces had “locked on” to their satellite phone signals and attacked the buildings from which they were coming.

Abu Abdu al- Homsi, an opposition activist, said the Syrian army had cut phone lines into the city and was bombing any buildings where they detected cellphone signals.

Two other Western journalist­s, British photograph­er Paul Conroy, who was on an assignment with Colvin, and French reporter Edith Bouvier of Le Figaro, were wounded in the attack.

French television reporter Gilles Jacquier was killed in Homs last month when a shell exploded amid a group of journalist­s covering protests in the city on a visit organized by the authoritie­s.

Syrian citizen- journalist Rami al- Sayyed, who provided live footage on the Internet from Baba Amr, was also killed late on Tuesday when a rocket hit a car in which he was travelling.

Colvin, who had worn a black eye patch since losing an eye to a shrapnel wound while working in Sri Lanka in 2001, was the only journalist from a British newspaper in Homs.

Her editor, John Witherow, spoke of his “great shock” at her death, describing her as “an extraordin­ary figure in the life of the Sunday Times” who would be “sorely missed.”

He said she “believed profoundly that reporting could curtail the excesses of brutal regimes and make the internatio­nal community take notice.”

Colvin’s mother Rosemarie said her daughter had been due to leave Syria Wednesday after the Sunday Times ordered her to leave because it was so dangerous.

“She had to stay. She wanted to finish one more story,” she said.

“Her legacy is: Be passionate and be involved in what you believe in. And do it as thoroughly and honestly and fearlessly as you can.”

Rupert Murdoch, who owns the Sunday Times, described Colvin as “one of the most outstandin­g foreign correspond­ents of her generation” with a “determinat­ion that the misdeeds of tyrants and the suffering of the victims did not go unreported.”

British Prime Minister David Cameron said her death was “a desperatel­y sad reminder of the risks that journalist­s take to inform the world of what is happening and the dreadful events in Syria.”

British Opposition leader Ed Miliband described her as “an inspiratio­n to women in her profession” and Hague said Colvin was “utterly dedicated to her work, admired by all of us who encountere­d her, and respected and revered by her peers.”

Colvin, who was from New York but lived in London, was married three times but never had children. She had worked for the Sunday Times for 20 years and twice won the British Press Award for Foreign Correspond­ent of the Year.

In a report published in the Sunday Times over the weekend, Colvin spoke of the citizens of Homs “waiting for a massacre.” She wrote: “The scale of human tragedy in the city is immense. The inhabitant­s are living in terror. Almost every family seems to have suffered the death or injury of a loved one.”

In 2010, Colvin spoke about the dangers of reporting on war zones at a London ceremony honouring fallen journalist­s.

She said: “We always have to ask ourselves whether the level of risk is worth the story. What is bravery, and what is bravado? Journalist­s covering combat shoulder great responsibi­lities and face difficult choices. Sometimes they pay the ultimate price.”

 ?? BULENT KILIC/ AFP/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Members of the Free Syrian Army take position in Idlib on Wednesday, the same day 68 civilians were killed by government forces across the country, according to Syrian opposition groups.
BULENT KILIC/ AFP/ GETTY IMAGES Members of the Free Syrian Army take position in Idlib on Wednesday, the same day 68 civilians were killed by government forces across the country, according to Syrian opposition groups.
 ?? AFP/ GETTY IMAGES ?? A Youtube image shows a Syrian man speaking outside the makeshift media centre where Sunday Times war correspond­ent Marie Colvin ( left, below) and French photojourn­alist Remi Ochlik ( right) died as they were targeted while trying to flee the building...
AFP/ GETTY IMAGES A Youtube image shows a Syrian man speaking outside the makeshift media centre where Sunday Times war correspond­ent Marie Colvin ( left, below) and French photojourn­alist Remi Ochlik ( right) died as they were targeted while trying to flee the building...
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