Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Virus fatal for Congo journalist

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DAKAR, Senegal — John Bompengo, who covered Congo’s political turmoil as a freelance photograph­er and video journalist for The Associated Press over the course of 16 years, has died, relatives said Sunday. He was 52.

The cause of death was complicati­ons of the coronaviru­s.

Bompengo had contribute­d to the AP since 2004, including coverage of the Ebola outbreak in northern Congo in 2018. He also worked for the U.N.-backed news service, Radio Okapi.

Andrew Drake, the AP’s Africa news director who also served as senior video producer for West Africa from 2011 to 2018, remembered Bompengo as a “stalwart colleague and an impressive storytelle­r.”

“John could talk his way in and out of places where others couldn’t to get striking images,” Drake said. “He had great contacts and friends across the entire country. Whether news was breaking in Kinshasa or across the river in Brazzavill­e, John was always on top of things, fast to arrive on the scene and with a plan to get the best pictures.

“He was committed to covering the flow of Congo’s sometime violent politics, always to be found at the heart of the action on the streets taking photos and video, but soon after he would be back in his suit covering the president.”

Among his memorable assignment­s was covering Congo’s 2006 election, the country’s first multiparty vote in more than 40 years. When dangerous clashes broke out after one opposition party decided to boycott, Bompengo went out into the streets to film them even when other journalist­s stayed back.

Bompengo is survived by his wife and nine children.

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