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03/19/07
Beth
Duff-Brown, Ken Moritsugu named to senior AP posts in Asia
NEW YORK -- Beth Duff-Brown, who has reported from three continents
for The Associated Press, has been named deputy editor for
the Asia-Pacific region and veteran newspaper correspondent
Ken Moritsugu will become enterprise editor.
The appointments are part of an expanded senior editorial
team at the regional headquarters in Bangkok, Thailand.
International Editor John Daniszewski announced the appointments
Monday.
"The AP's reporting from the region will benefit from
the addition of these two strong editors, particularly as
the AP looks to expand its coverage of China and other Asia-Pacific
stories," said Daniszewski.
Duff-Brown, chief of bureau in Canada since 2004, is a former
chief of bureau in New Delhi and led AP's coverage of India,
Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Nepal for three years.
She joined the AP in 1990 in Miami and transferred to the
International Desk two years later. In 1995, she was posted
to Abidjan, Ivory Coast, and covered civil wars in Zaire,
now Congo, Sierra Leone and Liberia.
In 1997, Duff-Brown was named chief of bureau in Malaysia
and covered the Asian economic crisis and tumult in Malaysian
politics. She moved on to India in 2000.
Before joining the agency, Brown was a reporter at newspapers
in Florida, spent two years in the Peace Corps in Africa,
and worked in China as an editor and freelance reporter. She
has a master's degree in journalism from Northwestern University.
Moritsugu was part of a Newsday team that won the Pulitizer
Prize in 1997 for best newspaper writing for coverage of a
TWA jetliner crash. He worked for the Long Island-based daily
from 1994 to 2000, then joined Knight-Ridder in Washington
as national economics correspondent with assignments in Afghanistan,
Japan, Britain and Germany.
Since 2004, Moritsugu has lived in New Delhi and contributed
stories to the former Knight-Ridder chain and USA Today, including
coverage of the Indian Ocean tsunami, U.S.-India relations
and terrorism. He is a graduate of Princeton University.
Duff-Brown and Moritsugu will report to Asia-Pacific Editor
Patrick McDowell in Bangkok.
"Beth and Ken are highly experienced, talented journalists
and will bring outstanding writing and editing skills to Asia,"
McDowell said. "They will enhance a dynamic, competitive
report with an eye to focused coverage and incisive, must-read
stories that have global impact."
About The AP
The Associated Press
is the essential global news network, delivering fast, unbiased
news from every corner of the world to all media platforms
and formats. Founded in 1846, AP today is the largest and
most trusted source of independent news and information. On
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news from AP.
Contact: Jack Stokes, AP Corporate Communications, 212.621.1720
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