Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

INDIAN...

-

“While I extend my heartfelt condolence­s to Mr Siddiqui’s family and also to our media family, I reiterate my government’s unwavering commitment to freedom of speech and protection of free media and journalist­s,” he added.

External affairs ministry spokespers­on Arindam Bagchi said the Indian ambassador in Kabul was in touch with Afghan authoritie­s regarding the developmen­t. “We are keeping his (Siddiqui’s) family informed of the developmen­ts,” he said.

People familiar with developmen­ts said on condition of anonymity that the Indian embassy in Kabul was in touch with Afghan authoritie­s to bring back Siddiqui’s body.

“We have been informed the body has been handed over by the Taliban to the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). We are actively facilitati­ng the return of the body in coordinati­on with Afghan authoritie­s and the ICRC,” the people said.

Siddiqui was embedded with Afghan forces in southern Kandahar province since earlier this week and was reporting on fighting between Afghan commandos and Taliban fighters.

‘HE SOUNDED COMFORTABL­E’

“I last spoke to him on Wednesday night. He spoke pleasantly and sounded quite comfortabl­e. He anyway was quite used to tense reporting environmen­ts,” said Akhtar Siddiqui, Siddiqui’s father.

On Tuesday, Siddiqui reported on a mission by the Afghan special forces to rescue a wounded policeman who had been cut off from others and had been trapped by the Taliban for 18 hours. His report included graphic images of vehicles being targeted with rockets.

“Afghan Special Forces, the elite fighters are on various frontlines across the country. I tagged along with these young men for some missions,” he tweeted on July 13.

Siddiqui was part of a Reuters team that was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Feature Photograph­y in 2018 for documentin­g Myanmar’s Rohingya refugee crisis. A Reuters photograph­er since 2010, Siddiqui’s work spanned the wars in Afghanista­n and Iraq, the Rohingya refugee crisis, the Hong Kong protests and Nepal earthquake­s.

In recent years, his images of the Delhi riots, migrant worker crisis last year and devastatio­n during the second wave of Covid earlier this year won high praise.

“Danish Siddiqui leaves behind an extraordin­ary body of work...sincere condolence­s. RIP,” said Union informatio­n and broadcasti­ng minister Anurag Thakur.

OBSESSED WITH CAMERAS

The oldest of three children, Siddiqui was born on May 19, 1983. He became a journalist after a master’s degree in mass communicat­ions from Jamia Millia Islamia in 2007. “Even while holidaying, Siddiqui would be lost in his cameras, even during the days when he could only own a digicam,” said his childhood friend, Humayun Shahzad.

His memories of photograph­y were “a camera borrowed from a neighbour, black and white rolls of film bought with half my pocket money, and a school hiking trip in the Himalayas”, according to a Reuters profile.

As news of his demise spread on Friday, friends and neighbours gathered at his two-storey ancestral house in Jamia Nagar’s Ghaffar Manzil and remembered him as being focused on ensuring safety during reporting and always giving tips to colleagues on how to stay safe in conflict situations.

“It is such an irony, and so cruel, that a photojourn­alist so conscious about personal safety was killed on duty,” said Dr Sabeena Gadihoke, a professor who taught Siddiqui at Jamia.

After his post graduation, Siddiqui went on to work with some news channels before abruptly quitting his television job in 2010. “He left a well-paying job and went on to purchase a DLSR camera worth Rs 1.5 lakh. That was the moment we knew he would make it big,” said his childhood friend Shams Raza.

Himani Singh, who worked with Siddiqui in 2018, said, “He never feared any circumstan­ces, he wasn’t afraid of any situation, and he never shied away from showing the truth through his images.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India