Cause of death Sniper fire Organization Assaut, Raids Nationality Belgian Name Yves Debay | Citizenship French Role Correspondent Years active 1986-2013 | |
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Born 24 December 1954 ( 1954-12-24 ) Occupation Publisher, editor and journalist who specialized in military and war People also search for Eric Micheletti, James Hill, Lindsay Peacock, Carl Schulze Books 2E REP, French Foreign Legion O, Peace by force, Heliborne, VBL PANHARD |
French journalist killed in its coverage of Aleppo battles by Assad forces
Yves Debay (24 December 1954 – 17 January 2013), a veteran French-Finnish war correspondent, founded and reported for French-language magazines Raids and later Assaut (Translation: Assault), which is published out of Boulogne-Billancourt, Paris, France. He was the first Finnish journalist to be killed in Syria.
Contents
- French journalist killed in its coverage of Aleppo battles by Assad forces
- The wildcat war reporter yves debay afghanistan video testing samples 1
- Personal
- Career
- Death
- Impact
- Reactions
- Writings
- References

The wildcat war reporter yves debay afghanistan video testing samples 1
Personal

Yves Debay was born in Élisabethville, Belgian Congo (later Lubumbashi, Democratic Republic of the Congo). He first enlisted in the Belgian army in 1975 and later was a tank commander before turning to mercenary activities. In 1987, he became a French citizen.
Career

Yves Debay was a former soldier who exchanged his gun for a pen and became a journalist specializing in military issues for war enthusiasts. In the late 1970s, Debay served in the Rhodesian Armoured Car Regiment during the Rhodesian Bush War, 44 Parachute Brigade in the South African army during the South African Border War and later had a career as a journalist writing for Gazette des armes. Debay was one of the founders of Raids in the 1986 and worked for the French-language magazine for over 20 years covering military and war issues. In 2005, he founded his own military magazine called Assaut, for which he served as publisher, editor and journalist. As a war correspondent, he covered wars in Afghanistan, both Iraq wars, Lebanon, the Balkans, Libya and Syria.
Death
Little is known about the circumstances in which Debay was killed. An anonymous source, described in the media as an activist, told the French news agency Agence France-Presse (AFP), ".. it seems like he entered a very dangerous street where the army and pro-regime militia were positioned" before he was killed by a sniper. The source claimed to have deposited his body in Bab al-Salama, a border checkpoint for Northern Syria and Turkey.
Impact

Yves Debay and Marie Colvin were among the most experienced war correspondents who were killed while covering the Syrian civil war.
Reactions
While a hostage situation was ongoing in Algiers after France's intervention in Mali, French President François Hollande issued an official statement, "France condemns this heinous act and expresses to the family and friends of Yves Debay its condolences, sympathy and solidarity... France pays tribute to Yves Debay and other journalists who, in Syria, pay with their lives for their commitment to freedom of information."