Peter Cave
Peter Cave | |
---|---|
Born | 1952 |
Citizenship | Australian |
Education | Newcastle Boys High School |
Occupation | journalist |
Employer | Australian Broadcasting Corporation |
Peter Cave is an Australian journalist. He is Current Affairs Foreign Editor for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
Early Life and Education
Peter Cave was born in 1952 in Newcastle, New South Wales. He grew up in Waratah as one of four children of Frederick David and Betty Cave. His father was an industrial galvaniser and his mother was a nurse.[1][2]
He attended Newcastle Boys High School.[3]
Career
At 18 he gained a cadetship with the then Australian Broadcasting Commission in Sydney. By 1974 he was working for Radio 2GB when he was flown-in to Darwin to cover the aftermath of Cyclone Tracey.[1]
He then re-joined the ABC where one of his first major assignments was the Coconut War in Vanuatu. His first overseas posting was to Japan in 1983.[1][4]
He later became the chief correspondent for Europe and the Middle East based in London and then bureau chief in Washington where he covered the election of George W Bush.[4]
He returned to Australia to be the presenter of AM (ABC Radio) before his current appointment.[4]
In his career with the ABC he has also reported on the end of apartheid in South Africa, the Palestinian intifada in the Occupied Territories, glasnost and perestroika in the former Soviet Union, the break-up of the former Yugoslavia and wars in Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia, Kosovo and Lebanon, two Gulf wars, the fall of President Suharto in Indonesia, the first Bali Bombing, three Fijian Coups, the troubles in Northern Ireland, the revolution in Egypt and the civil war in Libya.[4]
Peter has helped his fellow foreign correspondents with trauma training and peer support. He "helped pioneer the ABC's groundbreaking peer trauma support scheme."[5] In 2009 he was awarded an Ochberg Fellowship by the Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma attending the Atlanta, George fellowship meeting and the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies conference.[6][5]
Walkley Awards
Cave has won five Walkley Awards, Australian journalism's most prestigious accolades.[4]
1989 Awards
Cave was an ABC Radio reporter in Beijing with fellow ABC Radio correspondents Trevor Watson and Tony Hill in June 1989. Cave had been there for about a month interviewing the students, intellectuals and labour activists and had filed reports on "two half-hearted attempts" by the military to disperse the demonstrators and had a room with a balcony overlooking Beijing's Tiananmen Square. He has later said: "Just about everyone else had decided it was over and packed up," when at "about one in the morning I got a phone call from a colleague who had seen them run over a couple of people. I pulled back the blinds and saw an armoured personnel carrier go up and over a barricade and kill two people on bikes." He and Watson drove to the Square but were caught between two columns of troops and abandonned the car. With gunfire in the background he reported on the Tiananmen Square massacre. Cave won two awards for his reporting: the best radio news report award and the currents affairs award. Cave "was commended for outstanding journalism under particularly difficult circumstances." He was also nominated for the Gold Walkley.[7][8][9][1]
1990 Award
Cave was the London based European correspondent for the ABC when he reported from Berlin on the fall of the Berlin Wall. His coverage won him his third Walkley, this time for best news report.[10]
2004 Awards
Cave was on assignment in Iraq for the ABC on the outskirts of Baghdad when he, his cameraman, Michael Cox, and the driver-translator, Sameer, were ordered by armed masked men to approach their car: in the back seat was an American hostage, Thomas Hamill a civilian truck driver. "The only thing that saved us was the quick thinking of our fixer, Sameer, who told them we were Russians so they'd use us for propaganda rather than as hostages."[1] Cave was allowed to speak to Hamill and the resulting report was an international exclusive; Michael Moore used some of the footage in Fahrenheit 9/11. Cave won two Walkley Awards for the story: one for the radio news report, another for the television report he pieced together after.[11][12]
Family Life
Peter is married and has two adult sons.[1]
References
- ^ a b c d e f Quinn, Ben (1 July 2006). "The Truth Hurts". Newcastle Herald. Newcastle, New South Wales: John Fairfax Holdings Limited. p. 14.
- ^ Commonwealth of Australia. Electoral Roll. Division of Shortland. 1954. Sub-division of Waratah. Frederick David Cave and Betty Cave.
- ^ Charlton, Peter (22 August 2003). "Hendo brought vigour and balance to the job (Obituary: Ian Henderson". Courier-Mail. Brisbane, Australia: Queensland Newspapers Pty Ltd. p. 18.
- ^ a b c d e "Peter Cave, ABC Current Affairs Foreign Editor". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 3 Apr 2007.
- ^ a b "Peter Cave scores fellowship". ABC You. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 17 September 2009. Retrieved 29 July 2011.
- ^ "Ochberg Fellows". Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. Dart Centre. 2009. Retrieved 29 July 2011.
- ^ "Herald Journalists Scoop Walkley Awards". Sydney Morning Herald. Sydney: John Fairfax Group Pty Ltd. 17 October 1989. p. 7.
In radio, the best news report and the current affairs awards were both taken by Peter Cave, of the ABC, for his reports from China. He was commended for outstanding journalism under particularly difficult circumstances.
- ^ Cave, Peter (4 June 2009). "Remembering Tiananmen". Australian Broadcasting Corporation Transcripts. Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
- ^ Sue Williams and Sharon Krum (1 October 2003). "CELEBRATING 70 YEARS: Defining moments in history". The Australian Women's Weekly. ACP Publishing Pty Ltd.
PETER CAVE "I had a room with a balcony overlooking Beijing's Tiananmen Square and I remember the troops coming in, and I saw quite a few people killed," says Peter Cave, then an ABC Radio reporter watching a pro-democracy rally by unarmed student demonstrators in June 1989. Suddenly, it turned into a bloody massacre when the military stormed in. Hundreds of students were killed and thousands more wounded. "To see the might of the state being used against a popular uprising was very depressing. I felt that people power was never going to be able to change anything," says Peter, now the ABC's foreign editor.
- ^ Watson, Bronwyn (12 November 1990). "Digest breakfast, then face Casey". Sydney Morning Herald. Sydney: John Fairfax Group Pty Ltd. p. 5 (The Guide).
- ^ Phillips, Juanita (19 December 2004). "News sensation". Sunday Telegraph Magazine. Sydney: News Ltd. p. 25.
- ^ Day, Mark (9 December 2004). "No biff as Walkleys reward luck over Thorpie's big break". The Australian. News Ltd. p. 20.
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