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    War Reporter Died Trying To Retrieve Shoes

    War correspondent Marie Colvin died trying to retrieve her shoes so she could escape an army bombardment in Syria, The Sunday Times has said.

    The newspaper, which Ms Colvin worked for, has published details of her last hours as hopes to rescue journalists wounded alongside her in the besieged city of Homs have begun to fade.

    It says Ms Colvin, 56, was with five other journalists when they went into a building housing a rebel press centre in the district of Babr Amr.

    When they entered they followed the Middle Eastern custom of taking off their shoes and tried to recover them as rockets fell.

    Ms Colvin was on the ground floor on Wednesday morning when missiles hit the upper floors.

    The journalists - who included Paul Conroy, a photographer working for The Sunday Times, three French nationals and a Spaniard - were covered in dust but unhurt.

    They prepared to flee but had to get their shoes first.

    Ms Colvin ran to the hall, where she had left hers, but when she got there, a rocket landed at the front of the building, a few yards away.

    The blast killed her and Remi Ochlik, a 28-year-old French photojournalist. Mr Conroy, in a nearby room, was hit by shrapnel in the leg and stomach, and French journalist Edith Bouvier suffered multiple leg fractures.

    The newspaper said hopes have faded for the rescue of Mr Conroy and Ms Bouvier, who both urgently need medical treatment, and the others.

    Reports said the evacuation had run into trouble because of distrust between Syrian government forces and opposition groups during a ceasefire.

    Mr Conroy was reported to be refusing to leave without Ms Colvin's body despite being in danger of potentially life-threatening infection if his wounds were not treated.

    Ms Colvin's partner sent a message saying she had always been concerned about the living and "please let no more people die... for her body".

    Seven rebels were found dead with their hands tied after trying to smuggle medicines into Babr Amr to help the journalists and other injured civilians.

    The medicines were scattered and two other rebels were missing, the newspaper said.

    Ms Colvin, an American, had been a war correspondent 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.

     

    61 comments

    • kelvin allanj  •  Abergele, Wales  •  2 months ago
      A heroine like this working for Murdoch. What a waste.
    • Roger  •  2 months ago
      lot of trolls/syrian supporters posting here!!
      • pablo 2 months ago
        At least it make a change from the usual racists.
    • sarah  •  2 months ago
      Whoever released this detail, or the "journalist" who wrote this is responsible for disrespecting the honour of Marie Colvin who risked, and lost, her life to expose human rights abuses.
      It is also misleading: if she was in the hall, she was, along with the others injured, on her way out.
      • Sammy Wrae 2 months ago
        So you think that the truth should be suppressed because it makes someone look bad?
    • davey  •  Edinburgh, Scotland  •  2 months ago
      Of course she took her shoes off - basic sensitivity if you want people to talk to you!
      Of course she stopped for them - try running over broken glass in bare feet!
    • Hedgehogs in the Mist  •  2 months ago
      Can you imagine all this sort of thing happening in London or another large city in Britain! Such mass destruction, turmoil and massacre. It makes last year's riots quite tame.
    • Sammy Wrae  •  2 months ago
      To be honest, most people fleeing for their lives do it in whatever clothes they are wearing at the time.
      • Jay 2 months ago
        Running over rubble barefoot is not easy, I think.
      • Sammy Wrae 2 months ago
        Given a choice between running barefoot over rubble and being blown apart in a rocket attack, I am pretty sure what most people would pick.
    • Eric  •  Reading, England  •  2 months ago
      Taking your shoes off in this type of situation is shear stupidity. Steel toecaps and war zone dress. Bit like in the UK, don't lets offend the muslims. However, if they can get into the regions and then can't get out, tough. And, let's stay well out of this tribal affair.
      • FD 2 months ago
        'Sheer', not 'shear'......
      • Eric 2 months ago
        What I really meant was Shia but basically, it's all a load of #$%$
    • gene  •  Cardiff, Wales  •  2 months ago
      These Reporters Are loosing there Lives. For there Newspaper Bosses. Reporting on something Most British People are Not interested In. Arabs Killing Arabs.!
      • Rosemary 2 months ago
        No, they are losing their lives for doing their jobs at great personal risk. And if you aren't interested in the dreadful suffering she gave her life to bring to the notice of the rest of the world, then shame on you.
      • elizabeth 2 months ago
        Rosemary Gene is right,She should never be there. She wanted a kick and gotted
        Her reports were one sided most probably influenced by someone she got friendly
        They are just out of touch and reality. A reporter has to be imparcial at all time
        she wasn't. and others like her Believe that the rebels are fighting for a change to democracy. WRONG like in Libya once they take control they forgot all about
        democracy and start murdering people .They are fanatic islamists the worse of
        the lot and instigated by the new Islamic Turkish goverment.
    • NICHOLAS  •  2 months ago
      given the number of fifth columnists on here i'm glad our security services monitor/track internet forums/chat rooms

      hopefully you will soon be on the 'radar'
    • Rosemary  •  2 months ago
      I've gone beyond being merely disgusted at some of the reactions on these boards. A woman is dead because she cared enough to risk her life to bring the suffering of innocent people to the world's attention. If there's anything whatsoever amusing in either her death or the slaughter of the people of Homs - which we would know very little about were it not for Marie Colvin and the many like her - then perhaps someone would be kind enough to explain to me what it is.
    • ELAINE  •  Manchester, England  •  2 months ago
      I work front line mental health in the UK. I often visit people who are ill or under distress in their homes. I have learnt never to take my shoes off whatever the situation. In my experience you always need to be able to run at any given moment!
    • TREVOR  •  Ilford, England  •  2 months ago
      Perhaps newspapers ought to remind their journalists that if they want to play heroes in war zones, that while removal of shoes at the door may well be an admirable Eastern custom, proper soldiers used to being in war zones, know that one NEVER takes one's boots off if there is, or might be, action. You just might need to run.!
    • Eliza  •  2 months ago
      some comments here make me lose my faith in humanity
    • kez  •  2 months ago
      It is sad listening to all of the negative comments on here. I used to work with patch on the Sunday times and she really had a good eye for a story. She wanted to cover a Somalian pirate story one time but was stopped from doing so because the powers that be thought it might upset the pirates thinking she was trying to take the P!ss.....P.C or what?
    • Jo  •  2 months ago
      I was very sad to hear of Marie's death and condolences to her family. This lady was very brave doing the job she did, I wonder how many of the people on here that are so negative would be brave enough to do what Marie did. War is bad and evil and so many lives have been lost because of idiots that can't get along together. What a sad old world we live in, religion is mostly to blame for war these days, I don't know why some people can't accept what another person believes, I am not a religious person and as long as nobody throws their beliefs in my face I say let them get on with it. As long as they don't start getting violent and blowing up buses etc this is just disgracefull, my goodness life is short enough for goodness sake get on. It is always the innocent that suffer especially animals and children. The extremists that are out of control and only want to murder should be caught and hung.
    • Lucy  •  Preston, England  •  2 months ago
      How sad to focus on her trying to retrieve her shoes and not something heroic. She spent her life in danger, to make the world aware of how broken it is. She was an incredible woman and I just feel that this style of writing somehow belittles her life.
    • COLIN  •  Edinburgh, Scotland  •  2 months ago
      How Did They Get Into Syria...Were They There Illegally ?????
    • Roadrunner  •  London, England  •  2 months ago
      She should have remembered the "fire regs" don`t stop to collect anything..just run!!!
    • HUGE  •  London, England  •  2 months ago
      Lets not make a martyr out of Ms Colvin, sad though her death may be she was doing her job like many others and had clearly volunteered to be there. No doubt she loved the action and kudos that goes with being a war correspondent.
    • horrible hobbit  •  2 months ago
      a very brave lady,putting her life at risk to bring us the truth over the bloodshed caused to innocent civilians,she puts us all to shame,condolences to friends+family,R.I.P