Olivier Voisin in Syria © Edouard Elias / Haytham Pictures.
Freelance photographer Olivier Voisin died on 24 February from injuries sustained while covering the Syrian conflict
Author: Olivier Laurent
25 Feb 2013 Tags: PhotojournalismObituarySyriaAgence france-presse
Olivier Voisin sustained serious head and arm injuries on 21 February after a shell exploded when the 38-year-old freelance photographer was covering the Syrian conflict near the city of Idlib, says Reporters Without Borders.
Voisin was taken to a hospital in Antakya, Turkey. While the French foreign ministry tried to fly him out, his condition was too critical and he died on 24 February.
"We offer our most sincere condolences to Olivier Voisin's family," says Reporters Without Borders secretary-general Christophe Deloire. "His tragic death, just two days after the first anniversary of the deaths of French photographer Rémi Ochlik and US reporter Marie Colvin in Homs, has again highlighted the heavy price being paid by those covering Syria's armed conflict. I pay tribute to the 23 journalists and 54 citizen-journalists who have lost their lives in Syria since the start of the uprising in March 2011."
Last week, a group of photographers, editors and journalists launched the A Day Without News? campaign to highlight the risks their peers face when covering war zones, and to persuade governments to take action to ensure their safety.
Voisin worked for newspapers and magazines such as Le Monde, Libération, La Croix and The Guardian among many others. In an email he sent to Mimosa Martini, an Italian friend, on 20 February, he talked about the dangers of covering the Syrian conflict. "The artillery fires almost every 20 minutes and the ground often trembles. The problem is that I think that these are blind fires and their cannons are strong enough to cover about 20 kilometers. There aren't many direct combats. The guys would need about $20 U.S. worth of munitions for two-four hour battles. Therefore, their battles are shorter. During the day, nothing happens. I even wonder how they expect to win this war. This only confirms my fears that this war will last a long time." Read the full letter here.
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As I've said many a time-war is hell..and for the jobs these guys do deserve a gong..to be armed with a camera and a few meggapixel cards up at the front line needs guts.
It's the hazzard of the job that fatalities occur especially in a war zone where you don't know who the enemy is..
RIP to this poor guy and others that will follow no doubt to an early grave doing a job they like doing..
War is a bitch-not for the faint hearted either.
HW (Ex-Army).
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