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Robert Dulmers : ウィキペディア英語版 | Robert Dulmers
Robert Dulmers (born 12 June 1965) is a Dutch writer and journalist. Dulmers is known for his years of reporting from the former Yugoslavia during the Yugoslav Wars, during which he was arrested and interrogated. He has written several books, one based on his experiences in the former Yugoslavia and another, on Pope John Paul II's succession, based on years he spent studying for the priesthood in Rome. Dulmers mostly works freelance and has built a reputation as a single-minded and somewhat eccentric writer, difficult to work with but highly praised by his colleagues. ==Biography==
Dulmers worked freelance in 1981–1982 for the VPRO's news program ''BGTV'', and wrote a series of articles for ''Vrij Nederland'' with Frits Abrahams. He studied philosophy at the Universiteit van Amsterdam, and in September 1991 left for Graz to study with the Jesuits for a year. From Graz he traveled to Croatia, where the Yugoslav Civil War had just broken out, and reported for Dutch radio from East Slaviona. In the following years he reported from and lived in Osijek, Zagreb, Split and Sarajevo, working freelance for the ANP, the largest Dutch press agency. Dulmers was arrested on 19 May 1992 in Doboj, Bosnia and Herzegovina, by a Serbian militia while traveling with one of the UNHCR food convoys, and charged with espionage. He was released on 29 May after intervention by the Red Cross, after "reportedly () beaten and threatened with execution".〔 As a result of his experiences Dulmers was able to testify against Serbian militia leader Nikola Jorgic, who was sentenced to life in prison for genocide in 1997.〔(Rapport strafzaak Jorgic (blz. 73–75) )〕 Dulmers' colleague, photographer Teun Voeten, had stayed with him in Osijek, Croatia, while the town was being shelled by Serb forces in October 1991, and described how Dulmers, who knew everyone in town, walked around the ruins with a long black leather coat covering a tuxedo, and slept in the basement of the local clergy house among the pickles.〔 Voeten commented that he and Dulmers crossed paths frequently in years to come: they often disagreed and usually fought, but, he said, Dulmers had a "brilliant mind and a tender soul". Reviewing ''Zwart'' ("Black"), Dulmers' autobiographical novel based on his experiences in former Yugoslavia, Voeten called it "an impressive and, as far as I know, unique book for Dutch literature: a philosophical confessional novel with homo-erotic subtext, ''Bildungsroman'' and ruthless war reporting at the same time".〔
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