UK & World News
Sunday Times Journalist Killed In Syria

The Prime Minister and the Foreign Secretary have led tributes to two Western journalists, including Marie Colvin of the Sunday Times, who have been killed in an attack in the Syrian city of Homs.
Award-winning French photographer Remi Ochlik, 28, also died in the artillery attack, which is said to have targeted an opposition safehouse.
They were among 26 people killed on Wednesday as Syrian government forces pounded the rebel city for a 19th day, activists said.
An estimated 5,400 civilians have died in the country since protests against the regime of President Bashar al Assad erupted last March, according to the UN.
Paying tribute to Ms Colvin, 55, David Cameron told the House of Commons: "This is a desperately sad reminder of the risks that journalists take to inform the world of what is happening and the dreadful events in Syria, and our thoughts should be with her family and her friends."
William Hague added: "Marie and Remi died bringing us the truth about what is happening to the people of Homs.
"Governments around the world have the responsibility to act upon that truth - and to redouble our efforts to stop the Assad regime's despicable campaign of terror in Syria."
The White House described the deaths as "tragic" and offered its condolences to the journalists' families.
The Foreign Office earlier summoned Syria's ambassador to London, Sami Khiyami, for a meeting in which demands were made for the Syrian authorities to immediately repatriate the journalists' bodies and provide medical treatment for photographer, Paul Conroy, who was with Ms Colvin.
Ms Colvin, an American, had been a war reporter for the Sunday Times for 20 years. Her career took her to some of the world's most dangerous conflict zones, and she continued working even after losing an eye to a shrapnel wound in Sri Lanka in 2001.
In broadcasts on Tuesday night, she had charged the Syrian army with a "complete and utter lie that they are only targeting terrorists" and described the scenes in Homs and attacks on "cold, starving civilians" as "absolutely sickening".
Syrian authorities said they did not know the dead journalists were in Syria. Ms Colvin herself had written in her final article for the Sunday Times that she had entered Syria on a "smugglers' route".
Sky News' chief correspondent, Stuart Ramsay, had dinner with Ms Colvin and Mr Conroy the night before they crossed into Syria.
Ramsay said: "She was determined to get the story out. What she said carried a lot of weight with people around the world.
"On this occasion, she was hit by mortar fire in a stairwell as they decided to leave to find a safer location. It's horrendous there. A daily grind of missile after missile after missile."
The editor of the Sunday Times, John Witherow, described Ms Colvin as "an extraordinary figure in the life of The Sunday Times, driven by a passion to cover wars in the belief that what she did mattered".
"She believed profoundly that reporting could curtail the excesses of brutal regimes and make the international community take notice," he added.
"Above all, as we saw in her powerful report last weekend, her thoughts were with the victims of violence.
"She was a woman with a tremendous joie de vivre, full of humour and mischief and surrounded by a large circle of friends, all of whom feared the consequences of her bravery."
Rupert Murdoch, head of News Corporation, whose UK subsidiary News International publishes the Sunday Times, told staff in a memo: "We are doing all we can in the face of shelling and sniper fire to get (Paul Conroy) to safety and to recover Marie's body."
Mr Ochlik is the second French journalist to be killed in the unrest in Syria after cameraman Gilles Jacquier died last month in a mortar attack during an authorised press trip, also in Homs.
Upon hearing news of his death, the French government called on Syria to make an immediate stop to the bombardments in Homs, and to allow safe passage for humanitarian aid to reach affected areas.
French foreign minister Alain Juppe, who earlier summoned Syria's envoy to France to demand an end to the violence, said France held the Syrian authorities responsible for the journalists' killing.
Activists said a number of other local journalists and activists were killed and injured in the attack.
They died in the Babr Amr district of Homs, an area which has suffered the brunt of a government assault in recent weeks that activists say has left hundreds dead in the city.
The Syrian National Council (SNC) blamed the journalists' deaths on government forces.
"I see no reason why opposition members would shoot at journalists," said SNC spokeswoman Basma Qadmani. "It is, therefore, most probably related to the regime."
what do you think?

David Curtis
A fair number of Arab countries are well armed, so why dont they step in and sort it Arab to Arab, why should more UK, USA forces die for these places. We go in sort it out, leave and it kicks of again, it certainly will in Afghanistan.

eric clutterbug
not one western soldier should die for syria let the arab and russian ,chinese blood be spilt and see how they fail

Russell Beaumont
Its very sad that Marie Colvin died in vane but thats exactly what has happened. She should have known she was only reporting events that have happened for nearly 2000 years only the date keeps changing. Arab springs or uprisings whatever you call them are all the same never ending.

Ron Cheetham
some of the spelling on these comments has to be seen to be believed

Gavin Nellis
He says with no punctuation or capitals in his sentence at all!!!!!

Julie Crumpton
This comment has been removed for violations of our Terms and Conditions.

Adrian Wagstaff
To all those people ... who daily ... insult ... their news articles and say they could write one better ... I say ... just ... know ... the blood which is shed, the limbs which are lost, the journalists who go insane from war stress, the ones who turn to alcohol, just ... know ... where what we are reading ... comes from. Those people, they go to Hell itself just so we can read a few words to understand what is happening in our World. Shot, tortured, crashing, burning, gang-attacked ... all this suffering ... we pay what? ... £1 then throw their stories away? ... Such bravery ... is the basis of ............................ legends.

sausagenose60
In 50 years I've never met anyone who thinks they could write a newspaper article better than a professional journalist. Yes, it's very very sad but don't you think you're being slightly melodramatic?

George Clement
What twaddlle. And as for paying a £1 for a newspaper...............

RICK DALE
der what do you expect in a war zone

Ian Wetherill
This comment has been removed for violations of our Terms and Conditions.

shazad
How many soldiers die? They don't get this much attention, they get paid know where near as the journalists. Its sad when soldiers die, journalists are like politicians, liars!!! I've no time for them

Julie Crumpton
Respect, marie colvin, rip

Ian Wetherill
This comment has been removed for violations of our Terms and Conditions.

Gavin Nellis
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gypsy56
James parr - What do you think Cameron and Co would do if armed insurgents took to the streets of Britain and started indiscriminate killing of police and service personnel, using automatic weapons and mortars?

parsons
I'm afraid she'll disappear like the photographer and journalist.Nobody is safe in these dictatorship countries.

parsons
All dictatorship countries should be invaded now and bring down the regimes before it's too late for the rest of us.We did it in Iraq and we should continue it.

Joan Holmes
Hope to goodness that Cameron does nothing more than express extreme repulsion of this regime that is bombing indiscriminately its own people. We are hated enough around the world for poking our noses in and the Arabs et al would certainly not come to our defence if we were in trouble so I just hope we keep well out of it. As a previous contributor said, let the very well armed surrounding Arab nations go to the aid of their Syrian neighbours.

George Clement
Such a waste of life, I can never understand why women want to go into war zones to report the news at such a terrible risk, also I can't really understand men doing so, I'm not sexist but I don't think women should be there. I wonder if the Newspaper owners would do the job themselves if there were no journalist willing to do it. Me condolences to the bereaved families.






James Parr
10:42am on 22/2/2012
Its heartbreaking watching / listening to the reports from Syria. When is ASSAD going to be charged with crimes against humanity. Any despot who kills his own syrian children / people must be brought to account and already must go down in history alongside other murdering despots. We are daily seeing the murder of innocent people and what is the west doing to help those in need -- Russia and China are now complicit in the murder of innocent children all because as is usual for those countries financial gainis more important than human rights -- sadly the west are also becoming complicit in turning their backs to the daily geocide --- come on Cameron time to actually do something as prime minister that will actually reflect good on you in history
Clive Winn
2:35pm on 22/2/2012
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