Andrew Shumack
Andrew Shumack was an American freelance journalist and photographer from Pennsylvania who disappeared during the First Chechen War, a month after he left St. Petersburg for Chechnya, and is presumed dead.
Biography
Shumack, who was 25, worked for the weekly Bethlehem Star before traveling to Russia.
In a July 19 postcard he sent to his parents from Russia, Shumack wrote, "Money is tight, but things are well." A Spanish reporter called the U.S. Embassy in Moscow on August 9 to report that Shumack's knapsack was left at the press center in Grozny.
Shumack was last seen July 28, 1995 when he left the Chechen capital, Grozny, and headed toward the surrounding mountainous area.
Eight days earlier, on July 20, The St. Petersburg Press, an English language newspaper, had provided Shumack with a letter of introduction to help him obtain press credentials. In return, Shumack was to give the paper photographs and stories for three months. He had also planned to feed his photos to the Philadelphia Enquirer. It was the first time he had ventured into a war zone. Journalists in Grozny found his backpack, sleeping bag and documents (including a copy of his passport) abandoned in his hotel.[1]
He is feared to be dead because no one from the newspaper has heard from him since, and U.S. Embassy officials have not been able to locate him despite repeated trips to the region.[2]
References
- ↑ St. Petersburg Press, "American goes missing in Chechnya," 1995
- ↑ Committee to Protect Journalists, "Special Report: Journalists Missing," February 2008