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Jeffrey A. Gettleman (born 1971) is an American Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist. Since 2018, he has been the South Asia bureau chief of The New York Times based in New Delhi . [ 1 ] From 2006 to July 2017, he was East Africa bureau chief for The New York Times .
The investigation was led by Times staffer Jeffrey Gettleman, who had won a Pulitzer Prize in 2012, specializes in reporting conflicts and human rights issues, and has covered Iraq, Sudan, Somalia and Ukraine. [6] Gettleman recruited freelancer Adam Sella shortly after arriving in Israel in October 2023.
Jeffrey Gettleman's piece "Quandary in South Sudan: Should It Lose Its Hard-Won Independence?" outlines the nuances of a prospective international intervention in the South Sudanese civil war, and highlights the competing arguments that favor or oppose such an intervention.
International Reporting [16] Jeffrey Gettleman of The New York Times "for his vivid reports, often at personal peril, on famine and conflict in East Africa". The New York Times staff "for its powerful exploration of serious mistakes concealed by authorities in Japan after a tsunami and earthquake devastated the nation, and caused a nuclear ...
Journalist Jeffrey Gettleman suggests that the concentration of child soldiers in Africa is due to the shift among armed groups from being ideal-oriented to economically-driven. [20] Additionally, countries like Sudan have shifted towards the use of child soldiers after the decolonization and independence from Europe in 1956.
Lisa J. Shannon is an American author, human rights activist, and speaker known for her work in the international women's movement, including founding Run for Congo Women, co-founding Sister Somalia with Fartuun Adan Abdisalan, co-founding and being CEO of Every Woman Treaty.
Among the critics were The Times, [87] Jeffrey Gettleman in The New York Times, [26] Time, [88] The Guardian, [27] a pan-African internet news journal for social justice named Pambazuka News, [89] and an international organisation with a similar objective named Inter Press Service.
The 2007–2008 Ethiopian crackdown in Ogaden was a military campaign by the Ethiopian Army against the Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF). The crackdown against the guerrillas began after they killed over 60 Ethiopian troops and several foreign workers during a raid on a Chinese-run oil exploration field in April 2007.