STOCKHOLM, 18 déc 2007 (AFP) – The Swedish photographer Sven Näckstrand, who worked nearly 20 years in Israel
for Agence France-Press, covering two Intifadas in particular, died Tuesday evening of cancer at 58 years old,
we learned from his family. Unsurprisingly called the Viking by his comrades, Sven Näckstrand died surrounded
in a hospital at Uppsala in Sweden. The disease diagnosed last July struck down this man who was always smiling
and appeared so solid. Calm, courage, professional rigour and modesty were his most outstanding features.
“I never saw somebody so Zen. I never saw him to be irritated,” remembers Patrick Anidjar, the current director
of the
AFP Jerusalem office and who worked with him at the beginning of their careers in Israel. Born on
December 8, 1949 in Sweden, Sven Näckstrand spent the beginning of the Eighties as a soldier of the UN force
deployed in the Sinai after the Camp David agreements. Impassioned photographer, he made his trade in Israel,
initially at the Gamma agency then with
AFP since 1985. His “cliches” (iconic images?) which turned the world
testify to the tumultuous history of the area: two Intifadas (1987 and 2000), the first Gulf War, negotiations
of peace in Israel and in Washington, agreement of peace with Jordan, the assassination of the Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin in Tel Aviv in November 1995. In 2003, he decided to return to his native land where
AFP offered
him to become photo bureau chief for the Scandinavian area. Sven Näckstrand then changed his camera on his
shoulder for sporting events, in particular skiing, and magazine subjects. Very close to his family, Sven had
been married for 32 years with Gila. They have three children.