International Consortium of Investigative JournalistsInternational Consortium of Investigative Journalists

A Project By: The Center for Public IntegrityA Project By: The Center for Public Integrity

image

Ignacio Gómez, Colombia, is the director of investigations at Noticias Uno, a current affairs program at Bogota television station Canal Uno.

.(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address), Colombia

He is the former director of investigations at El Espectador, the country’s oldest daily newspaper. His reports have probed deeply into drug-trafficking, political corruption, arms trade, and mercenary involvement in the Colombian civil war and have appeared in several international publications, including Germany’s Der Spiegel and Britain’s The Guardian. Gómez has won numerous journalism prizes, including the Rothko Chapel Award in 1991 for his “exceptional commitment to truth and freedom.” In March 2000, Goméz was presented the Sam Chavkin Prize for Integrity in Latin American Journalism. He has also won three times Colombia’s Simón Bolívar National Prize for Journalism, including once for revealing how British mercenaries had trained Colombian right-wing paramilitaries involved in the narcotics trade. He later published a book, Los Comandos de la Guerra, on the topic. Gómez has written four other books, including La última misión de Werner Mauss, which examined a German spy’s career in Colombia as a hostage negotiator. Gómez also teaches press freedom at Javeriana University and is the director of the Fundación para la Libertad de Prensa (Press Freedom Foundation) in Bogotá. Gómez was a 2000-2001 Nieman journalism fellow at Harvard University. In 2002, he was a recipient of the International Press Freedom Awards from the Committee to Protect Journalists. Gomez is also a recipient of Amnesty International’s Human Rights Media Award for Journalist under Risk.

Print this






  • Facebook
  • del.icio.us
  • Digg! digg
  • Namibia
    • Gwen Lister, Namibia, a journalist for 25 years, founded The Namibian in 1985 during apartheid colonialism in the country.

      Read Complete Profile >
  • Kenya
  • Thailand/Australia
  • Peru
    • Angel Paez, Peru, is the founder of Peru's first investigative reporting team and has been working as its director at La Republica since 1990, exposing government corruption, international drug trafficking, and clandestine warfare.

      Read Complete Profile >
  • Japan
    • Tim Mitsuhiro Yoshida, Japan, won the 1985 Executive Managing Editor's Prize for Reporting for a series of articles that helped block planned construction of a huge tower at the Akiyoshida Plateau Quasi National Park.

      Read Complete Profile >
  • Denmark
    • Brigitte Alfter, Denmark, is a freelance journalist based in Copenhagen who specializes in European affairs. As a former Brussels correspondent for the Danish daily Information (2004-2008), Alfter has particular expertise in the use of freedom of information legislation. She is a member of the team that successfully sought data regarding the € 50-billion…

      Read Complete Profile >
  • Philippines
    • Sheila Coronel, Philippines, is executive director of the Manila-based Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism, an independent, nonprofit agency specializing in investigative reporting.

      Read Complete Profile >
  • More countries >
The Network Locate ICIJ members on this interactive map. Our members include newspaper and magazine reporters, TV and radio producers, and freelance journalists worldwide. Investigations From Around the World Find links and tools for cross-border investigative reporting, from networking with other journalists to tracking down documents and filing FOIAs. Investigations From Around the World Read some of the world’s best investigative reporting from ICIJ members, associates and others – on the environment, national security, corruption and more.