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Kim Gamel, a former veteran AP correspondent in Europe and the Middle East, dies

Kim Gamel, a former veteran Associated Press correspondent who covered conflicts and uprisings around the Middle East, including the height of the Iraq war and the Arab Spring, has died, according to her brother-in-law. She was 57.

Gamel died Wednesday in Idaho after a yearslong battle with lymphoma, Lee Ruff said.

Gamel brought the same care and compassion to her work reporting and directing coverage in war zones that she offered to her colleagues. She who was blinded in a Baghdad car bombing 鈥 bringing attention to her plight and leading to donations and offers of medical care.

鈥淜im was an energetic reporter and careful editor who made contacts easily, from military members and diplomats to store clerks and day laborers,鈥 said Robert H. Reid, the AP鈥檚 former Middle East regional editor who worked with Gamel at the news agency and later at Stars and Stripes.

鈥淪he had a wide circle of friends and enjoyed mentoring less experienced journalists as much as producing her own work,鈥 he said.

Even on the busiest days, Gamel always offered colleagues and guests at the Baghdad bureau cups of coffee 鈥 made in the machine she kept on her desk with the fine grounds she brought into the country. If a colleague was sick, Gamel offered some of the medication she also brought with her from the U.S.

鈥淜im鈥檚 career took her all over the world, and made her witness to history,鈥 said Paul Haven, vice president of Global 太子探花gathering at AP. 鈥淏ut whether it was covering the Arab Spring or the war in Iraq, she sought the human stories that brought those wars to life. Her work made a difference in people鈥檚 lives, and she will be deeply missed.鈥

A native of Idaho, Gamel began her career in print journalism soon after she graduated with a degree in Russian from Bates College in Maine, working for an English-language newspaper in Russia, the Moscow Tribune. She later earned a master鈥檚 degree from the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University.

She worked for the AP for about 20 years until 2014, when she left for a Knight-Wallace journalism fellowship at the University of Michigan. After the fellowship, Gamel joined Stars and Stripes, where she covered Asian affairs from her base in Seoul, South Korea. Most recently, she worked in Hawaii.

While at the AP, Gamel did a stint in Sweden as the Nordic and Baltic news editor, covering, among other things, the Nobel Prizes. Gamel also spent time in New York as an editor on the news agency鈥檚 International Desk. But she was best known for her work from conflict zones, including , , Iraq and Egypt. She was news editor in both Iraq and Egypt.

From her post in Cairo, Gamel helped direct the coverage of the Arab Spring uprising that toppled several governments in the region in 2011 as well as the early years of Syria’s civil war.

During Gamel鈥檚 time in Iraq, she learned about Shams Karim, a young girl who was blinded and disfigured by a 2006 bomb that also killed her mother.

Gamel followed the story, bringing the world鈥檚 attention to the girl who came from a poor family. The reports led to donations worth tens of thousands of dollars and Karim was taken abroad for treatment and given prosthetic eyes.

鈥淪hams was luckier than many Iraqi victims of violence because so many people came forward with offers of help,鈥 Gamel wrote in a .

鈥淲hatever good things happen to Shams in the future are due to Kim Gamel and her big heart,鈥 Reid said.

Gamel is survived by her mother, Bobbie Gamel; sister, Seana Ruff; and brother-in-law, Lee Ruff; as well as a nephew and a niece.

Copyright © 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, written or redistributed.

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