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"Killing Fields" photographer, Dith Pran, dead at 65.

"Killing Fields" photographer, Dith Pran, dead at 65.Dith Pran, a survivor of the Khmer Rouge genocide and photojournalist for The New York Times, died Sunday of pancreatic cancer at a New Jersey hospital.  He was 65.

Dith worked alongside the Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Sydney Schanberg to relay the story of the Cambodian atrocities to the international news media at both of their perils. Schanberg credits Dith with saving his life when the pair were captured by the Khmer Rouge.

Dith suffered in a Cambodian labor camp run by the radical communist regime when the Khmer Rouge seized power there in 1975.  He spent several years at the labor camp and lost more than 50 of his relatives to torture or starvation.

Schanberg remembers Dith as a journalist who was “always doing good deeds for people in the Buddhist tradition.” Dith escaped Cambodia to Thailand in 1979 where Schanberg flew to met him. He long advocated attention to the Cambodian genocides, compiling several stories and books on the subject while continuing his work with the Times.  Dith was portrayed by Dr. Haing Ngor, himself a Cambodian survivor, in the portrayal of the atrocities, “The Killing Fields,” and won an Academy Award for his role.

The world has lost a tireless advocate and a hero.

The New York Times 

 

Author

Daniel Graeber

Daniel Graeber is a writer for United Press International covering Iraq, Afghanistan and the broader Levant. He has published works on international and constitutional law pertaining to US terrorism cases and on child soldiers. His first major work, entitled The United States and Israel: The Implications of Alignment, is featured in the text, Strategic Interests in the Middle East: Opposition or Support for US Foreign Policy. He holds a MA in Diplomacy and International Conflict Management from Norwich University, where his focus was international relations theory, international law, and the role of non-state actors.

Areas of Focus:International law; Middle East; Government and Politics; non-state actors

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