Bob Cox | |
---|---|
Born | Robert J. Cox December 4, 1933 London, England |
Nationality | British |
Occupation(s) | Journalist, editor, publisher |
Employer(s) | Buenos Aires Herald 1959–1979
1982–2008The Post and Courier Charleston, South Carolina |
Known for | Exposing atrocities of Argentine dirty war |
Predecessor | Norman Ingrey |
Spouse | Maud (or Maude) Daverio de Cox |
Children | five, including David Cox |
Awards | Maria Moors Cabot prize, 1978
editor of the year, Granada Television, 1980 Wilson Center visiting scholar, 1980 Nieman Fellowship, 1980–1981 editor of the year, What The Papers Say, 1980 Officer of the Order of the British Empire Inter American Press Association's Grand Prize for Press Freedom, 2011 Ciudadano Ilustre (distinguished citizen) of Buenos Aires, 2010 |
Notes | |
Robert J. Cox (born December 4, 1933) also known as Bob Cox, is a British journalist who became editor and publisher of the Buenos Aires Herald, an English-language daily newspaper in Argentina. Cox became famous for his criticism of the military dictatorship (1976–1983). He was detained and jailed, then released after a day. During this time, he received multiple threats against his family. When one of the threats included very detailed information about his then 13-year-old son, he desisted from his work; the family left Argentina in 1979. He moved to Charleston, South Carolina, where he became an editor of The Post and Courier, owned by the same publishing company that owned the Buenos Aires Herald. In 2005, the Buenos Aires legislature recognized Cox for his valor during the dictatorship.
Biography
Robert Cox arrived in Argentina in 1959, and was soon hired as a copy editor by the Buenos Aires Herald, the English-language newspaper of Argentina's English-speaking community. He later married Maud Daverio, an Argentine national. His influence in the newspaper was vast, having them change their design and reach, from a small community-oriented newspaper, to a respected national daily. He was promoted to publisher in 1968. Under his direction, the newspaper moved in 1975 to a building with printing plant at 455 Azopardo Street, which remained the newspaper's offices for 34 years.[6]
Cox had married into a wealthy family, and lived a privileged life; his social circle included elite families and military figures. Initially, he sympathised with the junta because of social connections, threats from the leftist guerrillas, and an expected end to repression of Isabel Perón's government. But he and his newspaper reported clearly and often on the dirty war's atrocities, and editorialised about them, despite the junta's prohibitions.[7]
At his initiative, the Buenos Aires Herald was the first media outlet in Argentina to report that the de facto government was kidnapping people and making them "disappear". As a reporter, Cox went to the public meetings by the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo and, also personally checked that the military authorities were using the crematories at the Chacarita Cemetery to incinerate the bodies of the "disappeared".[8]
The day of the coup, they called us to tell us it was forbidden to report on attacks, actions of the guerillas, or bodies found on the streets. We discovered that the violence was the same or worse. People began to come to the newspaper to report on events. We also had our sources and contacts with the foreign press agencies. When a group of priests was murdered, outside the country it was reported, correctly, that it was the act of extreme-right groups, but here, the newspapers reported it was the guerillas, the Montoneros. When people came to our offices to report on killings, I asked them to request an habeas corpus. The military forbid the publishing of news on kidnappings or corpses, without official confirmation. We took the habeas corpus requests as confirmation. I wrote two pieces for The Post a little after the coup (24 May 1976). In one I said it was not true there was freedom of expression in Argentina because the newspapers had arrived to an accord with military officials to not publish certain news. What was important to me, was to save people. I went with lists of names and said I would not put anything in the paper if these people showed up alive. We were very lucky as some of these people were saved.[8]
Cox was detained in 1977:
When they came, I was preparing an issue on the birthday of the queen of Holland. I made them wait until I was finished, then I called Maud to let her know. I looked out the window and saw a (Ford) Falcon and a Peugeot with a sunroof, with the driver who looked like a Mexican bandido, with crossed bandoliers. They took me to Coordinación Federal through the basement, and as soon as I arrived, I saw a big swastika on the wall. They put me in a cell, without clothes, a kind of tube. It was a very strong experience. I did not know it at the time, but when they detained me, there was strong international pressure. I had my contacts. Tex Harris, who was a super guy, a diplomat from the USA who had been sent by Jimmy Carter and Patricia Derian, did a lot of work to free me.[8]
From that moment, Cox and his family lived in a permanent state of danger, suffering an attempt on his life, and his wife a failed attempt at kidnapping. When the threat of murder was imminent, he left the country. The decision was taken when one of his sons, Peter, received the following note, crudely simulating a note from the Montoneros guerilla group:
Dear Peter, we know that you are worried about the things that happen to the families of your friends, and that you are afraid that something similar could happen to you and your father. We do not eat children raw at breakfast. Considering the fear you all have, and that your dad is a high-level journalist, who is more useful to us alive than dead, we have decided to send you this little note as a warning. For this reason, and in consideration to the work your father does, we offer him (and all of you: Peter, Victoria, Robert, David and Ruth) the option to leave the country, where you run the risk of being assassinated. Do what you prefer, and tell "daddy" and "mummy" to sell the house and the cars, and to go work in Paris in another of the Herald's newspapers. You can also elect to stay here, working for human rights, but we do not think that is what your parents or your aunts and uncles expecting you in England for Christmas would like. A big revolutionary salute to your dad.
— Montoneros[9]
Cox and family left. He held a Nieman fellowship at Harvard in 1980. They settled themselves in Charleston as mentioned above, working for a sister publication as editor of the international section, covering news like the civil wars in El Salvador and Nicaragua.
In 2005 the Legislatura of the city of Buenos Aires after the initiative of the vice-chief of the Cabinet, Dr. Raúl Alberto Puy, paid homage to Robert Cox as a journalist during the years of the military dictatorship. Cox received the prize "in the name of the journalists that disappeared".[10]
In 2005, his wife, Maud Daverio de Cox wrote a book about his life in Argentina during the years of the military dictatorship titled "Salvados del infierno" ("Saved from Hell").[11]
In 2008, his son David wrote a book about his father's experiences in this period in Argentina titled "Dirty Secrets, Dirty War: The Exile of Robert J. Cox"[12]
In 2010, Cox was designated "an Illustrious Citizen of the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires" in recognition of his humanitarian work.[13]
In 2016, "Messenger On A White Horse" Documentary film by Jayson McNamara at BAFICI. This documentary examines Robert Cox's (editor of Buenos Aires Herald) role in the unmasking of the 1970s Argentinian military dictatorship's assassinations of the "disappeared".
In 2017, written in Buenos Aires Times.[14]
References
- ↑ "David Cox, author Robert J. Cox, author – Centro de Publicaciones" (PDF). Miami, Florida: Sociedad Interamericana de Prensa. Retrieved 11 September 2013.
- ↑ "Herald ex-editor Robert Cox wins IAPA Grand Press award". Buenos Aires Herald. 3 August 2011. Retrieved 11 September 2013.
- ↑ Spring, Suzanne R. (18 September 1980). "Robert Cox: Keeping the Lights on In Argentina". Harvard Crimson. Retrieved 11 September 2013.
- ↑ Newland, Dan (2 November 2009). "A Belated Tribute to Robert Cox". A Yankee at Large. Retrieved 11 September 2013. (blog)
- ↑ Smith, Bruce (10 June 2009). "Reporting Argentina's Dirty War: 1 editor's story". Charleston, SC: Joggling Board Press. Associated Press. Archived from the original on 8 December 2009. Retrieved 11 September 2013.
- ↑ "A brief history of the Herald". Retrieved 12 January 2016.
- ↑ "David Cox". Contemporary Authors Online. Detroit: Gale. 2010. Gale Document Number: GALE|H1000196700. Retrieved 11 September 2013 – via Fairfax County Public Library. Biography in Context.
- 1 2 3 Bruschtein, Luis (14 May 2005). "Las notas del 'Herald' salvaron vidas humanas" (in Spanish). Página/12. Retrieved 10 February 2008.
- ↑ (in Spanish) Ruiz Guiñazú, Magdalena (2009). "Reportaje a Robert Cox", Perfil, 1 November 2009.
- ↑ Guinzberg, Victoria. "Homenaje a Robert Cox, ex editor del "Herald". El hombre que vio a la bestia" (in Spanish). Página/12, 1 de septiembre de 2005. Retrieved 10 February 2008.
- ↑ Daverio de Cox, Maud (2005). Salvados del infierno. Buenos Aires: Crisol. ISBN 987-542-017-4.
- ↑ Cox, David (2008). Dirty Secrets, Dirty War: The Exile of Robert J. Cox. Evening Post Publishing Company. ISBN 978-0-9818735-0-3. Retrieved 11 September 2013.
- ↑ Greenslade, Roy (1 August 2010). "Cox, hero of Argentinian journalism, gets honorary citizenship at last". Grenslade blog. The Guardian. Retrieved 3 August 2010. (blog)
- ↑ Cox, Robert (28 October 2017). "Oficialitis, reprisals and 'useful idiots'". BA Times. Buenos Aires Times. Retrieved 30 October 2017.