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Vale: Peter Harvey

Veteran Channel Nine journalist Peter Harvey has died, following a brief battle with cancer, at the age of 68.

2013-03-02_1813Veteran Channel Nine journalist Peter Harvey has died, following a brief battle with cancer, at the age of 68.

He passed away surrounded by family earlier today.

Harvey had 37 years in TV journalism with Nine News after ten years in print with The Daily Telegraph and then with Newsweek and the Guardian.

His distinct voice was synonymous with his political reports from Canberra, together with his baritone sign-off “Peter Harvey, Canberra.”

He spent 14 years in Canberra, including reporting on the Whitlam dismissal, before travelling the globe for Nine and joining 60 Minutes for its mailbag segment. He was a war correspondent in Saigon during the Vietnam War, and reported from hotspots in Israel, Egypt, China, The Philippines and a memorial visit to Gallipoli.

A Walkley Award winner, Harvey worked right until the end, including appearing on Nine News and 60 Minutes last month.

“This is the saddest of days for the Nine Network,” says Nine chief executive, David Gyngell. “Peter Harvey – Harves as he is known to everyone – is and will remain an indelible part of Nine.”

Long-time friend and Nine Network colleague Peter Overton says “we lose a fine storyteller. He came into the lounge rooms of so many families across Australia for so many years.

We lose a character,” says Ray Martin. “Journalism, like politics and life, is full of bland, colourless people. He is full of colour.”

His daughter Claire Harvey is the deputy editor of The Sunday Telegraph, and Adam Harvey is a journalist with ABC’s 7.30. 

Last month he appeared on ABC’s One Plus One interview show where he was asked about his career and his illness.

On cancer:
Jane: The writer Christopher Hitchens in his final book which was called ‘Mortality’ talked about the depression he faced in the first seven days after his diagnosis for oesophageal cancer, particularly when he was told that certain therapies were not open to him. He spoke about a sense of being cheated, as well as disappointed. Can you understand that, did you ever get those sentiments?
Peter: Oh yes, I don’t want to be cheated. I’m 68yrs old, I consider I’ve got a fair bit of living that I want to do. As soon as we’re able to, Anne and I are going back to Florence and Venice…It was I guess an understandable reaction (Christopher Hitchens’s), you think to yourself ‘Oh, why me, why is this happening’ but you get past that point and you say, Ok, well it is. It is happening so lets deal with it and lets be as positive as possible about it and get the show back on the road. Now there are a lot of clichés there, but they’re meaningful. If you hang on to the possibility that things are going to be better not worse, I think it sets you up pretty well. I don’t want worries about my day, ruining my tomorrows.

On continuing work
Peter: I want to keep working as long as I possibly can which I hope is for a very long time! …Jane I have been absolutely overwhelmed by the support and reaction from people around this country, it’s been extraordinary… I felt extraordinarily grateful that so many people out there went out of their way to wish me good luck.

Source: Nine News, News Ltd

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