Nate Thayer, Journalist Who Interviewed Pol Pot, Dead at 62

Nate Thayer, the American journalist who interviewed Pol Pot, speaks at the Foreign Correspondents' Club in Bangkok, July 16, 1997. | Photo Credits: VOA

Nate Thayer, the larger-than-life American freelance journalist who scored a massive scoop with his 1997 interview with Pol Pot, the genocidal leader of Cambodia's Khmer Rouge, has died at 62, his family said Wednesday.

Thayer was discovered dead by his brother Rob Thayer at his Falmouth, Massachusetts, home Tuesday.

"He had a lot of ailments. He was seriously ill for many months," the brother told Agence France-Presse.

Nate Thayer spent years reporting on Cambodia politics and society, including the Khmer Rouge, the brutal communist regime that left more than 1 million people dead between 1975 and 1979.

Beginning in 1989, he worked for The Associated Press and then publications such as The Phnom Penh Post and the Far Eastern Economic Review, building contacts in the dangerous jungle border regions of Thailand and Cambodia.

With his shaven head, chewing tobacco and handiness with guns, he gained a reputation as a gonzo journalist, setting out on crazy adventures such as traveling with a well-armed reporting team from Soldier of Fortune magazine into eastern Cambodia in search of a likely extinct forest ox called a kouprey.

In the wild west frontier of Thailand and Cambodia, he braved firefights and was severely injured by a landmine in 1989 while riding with Cambodian guerillas.

An interview with 'uncle'

Thayer's work paid off in 1997 when he sent a cryptic message to Far Eastern Economic Review editor Nayan Chanda that he would interview "uncle," or Pol Pot, whom no journalist had met for two decades.

From Thailand, Thayer slipped into Pol Pot's Anlong Veng jungle redoubt, beating out a New York Times team that had arrived near the border thinking they would see the shadowy Cambodian.

Days later, he broke the story in the Far Eastern Economic Review. Pol Pot, blamed for murdering over a million people, told him, "Am I a savage person? My conscience is clear."

Chanda attributed Thayer's journalistic success to a distinct "doggedness."

"He was very intense, very focused on the story he was working on, almost like a force of nature," Chanda said.

"He actually knew quite a few of the Khmer Rouge. ... Nobody else spent as much time pursuing those guys, going to dangerous places, being with them in a firefight," he added.

A year later, Thayer scooped others with Pol Pot's death and an interview with the one-legged Khmer Rouge army commander and Pol Pot rival, Ta Mok.

But by then, he was embroiled in a fight with ABC News' "Nightline" program over its use of his video footage and reporting on the Khmer Rouge, which Thayer said violated their agreement.

Thayer rejected a prestigious Peabody Award, which cited him as a correspondent for "Nightline," and the two sides later settled his suit.

Focused on Asia

The son of a former U.S. ambassador to Singapore, Thayer spent most of his career focused on Asia, reporting from combat situations such as the Myanmar border and investigating North Korea.

He also traveled to Iraq to report on the 2003 U.S. invasion.

He won a number of journalism awards, including the ICIJ Award for Outstanding International Investigative Reporting, and was proud of being a freelancer, calling for more respect and better pay for reporters not employed full-time.

Slowed by long-term ailments, some dating to his injuries from the mine explosion, in the past decade Thayer reported online on right-wing extremism from Washington and Massachusetts.

With his health failing, he spent his final months posting poetic odes to his "best pal," his dog, Lamont.

Source: VOA

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