Annick Cojean

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Annick Cojean

Annick Cojean ([ ko'ʒɑ̃ ]; born August 2, 1957 in Brest , Brittany ) is a French journalist. She works for the left-liberal Parisian newspaper Le Monde and for television.

Life

Annick Cojean is a graduate of Sciences Po, an elite university, and has been with Le Monde since 1981 . She became known for articles about Diana Spencer and Isabelle Adjani . She has her own program on the public service channel France 5 , where she moderates the program Empreintes (in German footprints ).

She has published several books, including two titles on well-known Magnum Photos photographers , Marc Riboud and Martine Franck, and two travel books on Canada and Australia .

Cojean is a member of the Fondation franco-américaine, which maintains relations between the United States and France. In 1996 she received the Albert Londres Prize for a work about survivors of the Holocaust .

In 2012 her book about the Libyan “revolutionary leader” Muammar al-Gaddafi was published , in which she alleges that he has violated numerous young girls' human rights. In March 2013 it was also published in German by the Berlin Aufbau-Verlag . A translation into Arabic has now also appeared.

Fonts

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Short list of Cojean's articles on the newspaper page ( Memento of the original from October 29, 2012 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.lemonde.fr
  2. Portrait of the journalist on the website of the public radio station franceinter.fr , accessed on March 5, 2013
  3. Rosalind Coward: Diana: The Portrait. McMeel, Kansas City 2004, here p. 142
  4. ^ Sascha Lehnartz: Gaddafi's grotesquely brutal Viagra totalitarianism. , welt.de of March 3, 2013, accessed on March 5, 2013