Simone Camili-AP Photos |
Simone Camilli was a consummate storyteller — a passionate, talented
newsman with an eye for detail and the ability to convey events with
powerful video images that touched people around the world.
As an Associated Press video journalist, he covered popes in the
serene splendor of the Vatican and the horrific violence on battlefields
from the former Soviet republic of Georgia to the Middle East.
But he could also capture the simple joy of a smiling child.
Camilli once said a favorite story of his was about a group of clowns
performing for young Syrian refugees, bringing moments of happiness to
the lives of the boys and girls who fled the civil war.
The 35-year-old newsman was killed Wednesday in the Gaza Strip while
reporting on the aftermath of Israel-Hamas war — the first foreign
journalist to die in the Gaza conflict that began last month.
He was killed in a blast as police were defusing unexploded ordnance.
The explosion also killed a freelance Palestinian translator, Ali
Shehda Abu Afash, as well as four Gaza police engineers trying to
neutralize the explosives. Four people, including AP photographer Hatem
Moussa, were badly injured.
"He was a very good cameraman and editor and a lot of his best work
was not from the battlefield.
He was passionately interested in art and
music, and it was in these areas that he turned in some of his best
work," said Chris Slaney, former senior producer in Jerusalem.
His father, Pier Luigi Camilli, the mayor of the Italian town of
Pitigliano and a former journalist himself, spoke of the work that his
son did in "all the most dangerous places."
"I'm proud of my son, who did a job that he had since forever in his
blood," the elder Camilli told reporters in Rome. "I spoke to him the
other day and told him to be careful. 'Be careful, be careful.' He said,
'No, here everything is calm. Don't worry.'"
Simone Camilli's death came at the peak of a thriving career full of promise.
An Italian national, he had worked for the AP since being hired as a
freelancer in Rome in 2005 while taking Islamic studies and learning
Arabic at Sapienza University. One of his first assignments was covering
the illness of Pope John Paul II.
He covered major stories across Europe, including the independence of
Kosovo, the war in Georgia and the arrest of Bosnian Serb military
leader Radko Mladic. He also had assignments in some of the world's most
violent conflict zones in Lebanon, Iraq, Israel and the Palestinian
territories.
"Simone was well known throughout Europe, and especially to our video
team in London, where his death has hit AP deeply," Gary Pruitt, the
AP's chief executive, said in a memo to the staff.
Pope Francis prayed for Camilli in front of a group of about 70
journalists accompanying him aboard the papal plane on his flight to
South Korea.
"I have to make a silent prayer for Simone Camilli, one of yours, who
today left us in service. Let us pray in silence," said Francis,
clearly moved.
"These are the consequences of war," he added.
Camilli relocated to Jerusalem in 2006, and often covered assignments in Gaza, and moved to Beirut in early 2014.
He was a welcome face in Gaza and loved the story so much that he
recently turned down an assignment in Iraq to cover the seaside strip,
said Najib Jobain, the AP's chief producer in Gaza. He said Camilli was
like a brother.
"He was so happy to be with me working in Gaza," Jobain said. "He was
asked, 'Do you want to go to Irbil or Gaza?' He said, 'I'll go to
Gaza.'"
Other colleagues around the world remembered Camilli as a warm, charming and sensitive man who wanted to be where the news was.
"From the moment he arrived in the Rome bureau, he wanted to learn
everything, falling in love with the job," said Maria Grazia Murru,
senior producer in Rome.
"He wanted to learn everything and be the first," she said. "I had
the greatest admiration for him and what he was doing. I will miss his
enthusiasm, his Roman accent and his smile."
Camilli arrived in Jerusalem in the summer of 2006, amid a surge in the conflict between Israel and Hezbollah.
While in Jerusalem, Camilli became involved with two Palestinian
partners in running an exhibition space and workshop for young artists,
Slaney said.
"Simone was largely self-taught in the visual sense, and whenever I
was faced with some tricky problem that with 30 years of professional
experience I couldn't solve, he was my go-to guy in editing and image
manipulation," he said.
While in Beirut, Camilli produced warm and heartbreaking pieces about
the more than 1 million Syrians who have fled to Lebanon in the past
three years from a war that has ripped apart their homeland.
His work had "an incredible eye for detail and was able to
personalize stories and portray human drama," said Tomislav Skaro, the
AP's Middle East regional editor for video.
Camilli's pieces in Gaza told "the narrative of a destroyed Strip trying to get back to life," Skaro said.
"He was incredibly calm, mature beyond his age, gentle and the friend that everybody wants to have," he added.
Camilli is survived by a longtime partner and a 3-year-old daughter in Beirut, as well as his parents and two sisters.
The day before he left Beirut for Jerusalem and what would be his
final assignment in Gaza, Camilli spoke happily over coffee about
visiting his father during a recent vacation in Pitigliano, a Tuscan
town of about 4,000 people between Florence and Rome.
He sported a new haircut, which made him look younger and more
mischievous. But then he gave his signature timid smile, eager to get to
his new story.
Diaa Hadid, a longtime colleague who worked with Camilli most recently in Irbil, Iraq, described him as "warm, lovely, funny."
"I can't think of the past tense and Simone," she said.
Source: AP
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