{"id":"77","title":"Ben Bohane","description":"
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After several years in Sydney working on alternative lifestyle magazines such as Stiletto and 3D, Bohane\u2019s first foreign reportage assignment was covering the Vietnamese army withdrawal from Cambodia in 1989. He then spent the next four years based in South and South East Asia covering the wars of Cambodia, Burma and Afghanistan. <\/p>
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He secured the first interview with Golden Triangle opium warlord General Khun Sa in 1991 after he was indicted by the US. In 1992 he was reportedly the first western traveller to go overland from Afghanistan to Moscow in decades, as the Soviet Union was collapsing. Between 1992 and 1993 he was based in London covering Northern Ireland and Europe.<\/p>
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In 1994, Bohane returned to Australia to begin covering the much under-reported Pacific region. Since then he has focused on \u2018kastom\u2019 and conflict throughout Melanesia and indigenous Australia, documenting cults, cargo cults and new religious movements across the region. <\/p>
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While covering every major conflict in the South Pacific \u2013 including East Timor, West Papua, Maluku, PNG, Solomon Islands, Bougainville, Vanuatu, Fiji and New Caledonia - he travelled and lived with a variety of tribal, cult and armed rebel groups. He was thereby able to secure the first pictures of BRA leader Francis Ona in Bougainville in 1994 and the only interview and pictures of Guadalcanal warlord Harold Keke, before he surrendered to Australian and RAMSI troops in the Solomon Islands in 2003.<\/p>
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His coverage of Indonesia included interviews with the commander of Laskar Jihad in Ambon, OPM Commanders in West Papua and Falantil Commanders in East Timor.<\/p>
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He has the largest personal photo archive of the Pacific islands in the world. His photographs are collected by the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art, the British Museum and the Australian War Memorial, as well as being held in private collections.<\/p>
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His work has appeared in Vanity Fair, The New York Times, TIME, Newsweek, National Geographic, The Wall St Journal, Monocle, The Guardian, French Geo, Asahi Shimbun and numerous publications in Australia. He has also done tv news stories and documentaries that have been shown on ABC & SBS TV Australia, BBC, CNN, F24 (France), ARD (Germany) and NHK (Japan).<\/p>
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In 2003 his photos were published in 'Follow the Morning Star\u2019, a book documenting the forgotten struggle for independence in West Papua. His book 'The Black Islands\u2014Spirit and War in Melanesia<\/i>\u2019 was published by Waka Press in 2013.<\/p>
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He has exhibited his photos in exhibitions across the world, from the Australian Centre of Photography, to the Perpignan festival in France, the Angkor festival in Cambodia and UN headquarters in New York.<\/p>
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His policy work has involved time with the Pacific Institute of Public Policy (PiPP) and the Australia Pacific Security College (APSC). <\/p>
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In 2019 he was named the inaugural winner of the Walkley\/Sean Dorney award and grant for Pacific journalism. <\/p>
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