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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, July 30, 2014
Remembering the work of photojournalist Camille Lepage ( 26)

29/07/2014
Camille Lepage, a 26-year-old French photojournalist who had spent
months documenting deadly conflict in Central African Republic has been
killed, the French presidency said Tuesday, May 13. Lepage, a freelance
photographer whose work was published in major French and American
newspapers, died in western Central African Republic not far from the
border with Cameroon, authorities said.
“All means necessary will be used to shed light on to the circumstances
of this murder and to find her killers,” the French presidency said in
the statement.
The U.N. Security Council as well as the Committee to Protect
Journalists also called for an immediate investigation into her death.
Lepage’s work had appeared in The New York Times as well as in The Wall
Street Journal, the Washington Post and the Los Angeles Times. She also
had sold images to French newspapers including Le Monde and Liberation.
Her death comes as the security situation worsens for reporters and
photographers in the volatile country; two Central African journalists
already have been killed this month in Bangui, the capital.
A native of Angers, France, Lepage also had worked extensively in Juba,
South Sudan before moving to Central African Republic. In an interview
with the photography blog PetaPixel, she said she was drawn to covering
forgotten conflicts.
“I want the viewers to feel what the people are going through. I’d like
them to empathize with them as human beings, rather than seeing them as
another bunch of Africans suffering from war somewhere in this dark
continent,” she said. “I wish they think: ‘Why on Earth are those people
in living hell; why don’t we know about it and why is no one doing
anything?’ I would like the viewers to be ashamed of their government
for knowing about it without doing anything to make it end.”
Jerome Delay, chief Africa photographer for The Associated Press, first
met Lepage while the two were working in South Sudan and again in
Central African Republic. On Tuesday he described her as a “very
talented, extremely courageous young woman.”
In
this file photo taken Oct. 6, 2013 in the Bonga Bonga stadium in
Bangui, Central African Republic, French photojournalist Camille Lepage
smiles with a local dancer. Lepage, 26, was killed while covering the
deteriorating situation in the Central African Republic Monday May 12,
2014. (AP Photo/Sylvain Cherkaoui, File)
“She was the one who would spend the time on the job to make others
understand what was going on in places like Central African Republic and
South Sudan,” he said.
Lepage had recently traveled to New York for a prestigious portfolio review and a workshop at The New York Times. (AP)

