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Anthony Shadid : ウィキペディア英語版 | Anthony Shadid
Anthony Shadid ((アラビア語:أنتوني شديد); September 26, 1968 – February 16, 2012) was a foreign correspondent for ''The New York Times'' based in Baghdad and Beirut.〔("Anthony Shadid, Reporter in the Middle East, Dies at 43" ) by Margalit Fox. ''New York Times'', February 16, 2012. Retrieved February 17, 2012.〕 He won the Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting twice, in 2004 and 2010. ==Career== From 2003 to 2009 Shadid was a staff writer for ''The Washington Post'' where he was an Islamic affairs correspondent based in the Middle East. Before ''The Washington Post'', Shadid worked as Middle East correspondent for the Associated Press based in Cairo and as news editor of the AP bureau in Los Angeles. He spent two years covering diplomacy and the State Department for ''The Boston Globe'' before joining the Post's foreign desk.〔(The Washington Post staff page )〕 In 2002, he was shot in the shoulder by an Israel sniper in Ramallah〔Anthony Shadid, ''House of Stone: A Memoir of Home, Family, and a Lost Middle East,'' Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2012 p.7:'I was shot by an Israeli sniper in Ramallah.'〕 while reporting for the ''Boston Globe'' in the West Bank. The bullet also grazed his spine. On March 16, 2011, Shadid and three colleagues were reported missing in Eastern Libya, having gone there to report on the uprising against the dictatorship of Col. Muammar Al-Ghaddafi.〔 〕 On March 18, 2011, ''The New York Times'' reported that Libya agreed to free him and three colleagues: Stephen Farrell, Lynsey Addario and Tyler Hicks. The Libyan government released the four journalists on March 21, 2011.
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