Kate Webb

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Kate Webb (24 March 1943 – May 13, 2007) was a New Zealand-born Australian foreign correspondent for UPI and Agence France Presse.

Born Catherine Merrial Webb in Christchurch, New Zealand, Webb moved to Canberra, Australia with her family while still a child. She graduated from the University of Melbourne, then left to work for the Sydney Daily Mirror. In 1967 she quit the paper and travelled to Vietnam to cover the escalating war. Webb was soon hired by UPI and earned a reputation as a hard-drinking, chain-smoking war correspondent:[1] she was the first wire correspondent to reach the U.S. embassy in Saigon after the Tet offensive.[2] With the death of Phnom Penh bureau chief Frank Frosch in 1970, Webb was selected to fill his position—she later claimed it was because she spoke French.[3] In 1971 she made news herself when she was captured by North Vietnamese troops operating in Cambodia. Premature official reports claimed that a body discovered was Webb's, and the New York Times published an obituary.[4] She emerged from captivity 24 days after she was captured, after having endured forced marches, interrogations, and malaria. She described her experiences in War Torn, a collection of reminiscences by women correspondents in the Vietnam War.

After the war, she continued to work as a foreign correspondent for UPI and Agence France Press, and served as a correspondent in Iraq during the Gulf War, in Indonesia as Timor Leste gained independence, and in North Korea, where she was the first to report the death of Kim Il Song. She also served in Afghanistan, and later described an incident in Kabul as the most frightening in her career. Following the collapse of Mohammad Najibullah's communist regime, she was captured by a local warlord and brought to a hotel, where she was brutally beaten and dragged up a flight of stairs by her hair.[5] She finally escaped with the help of two fellow journalists, and hid out on a window ledge in the freezing Afghan winter, while the warlord and his men searched the building for her.[6]

Webb retired to the Hunter Valley in 2001. She died of bowel cancer on 13 May 2007.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ " Kate Webb: Veteran war reporter held captive in the Cambodian jungle," The Independent, 15 May 2007.
  2. ^ "Kate Webb, 64; pioneering UPI foreign correspondent was captured in Vietnam War," The Los Angeles Times, 15 May 2007.
  3. ^ Ibid.
  4. ^ "A Masked Toughness," The New York Times, 21 April 1971.
  5. ^ The Los Angeles Times, Op cit.
  6. ^ The Independent, Op cit.

[edit] References

  • Webb, Kate, et al. War Torn: Stories of War from the Women Reporters who Covered Vietnam. Random House, 2002. ISBN 0375506284.

[edit] External links


Persondata
NAME Webb, Kate
ALTERNATIVE NAMES Webb, Catherine Merrial
SHORT DESCRIPTION Australian journalist
DATE OF BIRTH 24 March 1943
PLACE OF BIRTH Christchurch, New Zealand
DATE OF DEATH 13 May 2007
PLACE OF DEATH Sydney, New South Wales, Australia