Marlise Simons


Marlise Simons is a Dutch-born journalist who joined The [New York Times] in 1982.
She has been based in Paris since 1989, covering a range of subjects across Europe and elsewhere.
Most recently she has focused on international human rights law and on trials involving war crimes and genocide at both national and international courts.

Career

Simons has worked extensively as a journalist throughout Latin America, also reporting for The Washington Post. She was based in Mexico City from 1971 to 1984 and in Rio de Janeiro from 1984 to 1989.
For The New York Times, she has reported from Central and South America and the Caribbean on conflicts and political murder, torture and disappearances in Latin America. She has also reported on environmental issues in the Brazilian Amazon.
She currently works for The New York Timess Paris Bureau. In Europe her writing has covered political, social, cultural and environmental issues and in particular proceedings at international courts and tribunals in The Hague dealing with war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide. She has reported extensively on the work of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia and the International Criminal Court.

Personal life

Simons was born in Sittard, The Netherlands. She is married to Alan Riding, a journalist and author, with whom she has a son, Alexander.

Awards and nominations

;Awards
;Nominations
  • 1991 Nomination, Pulitzer Prize for Foreign Reporting, by The New York Times.

    Books

  • Gabriel Garcia Marquez: Conversations with the author Amsterdam Meulenhoff, 1986
  • The Smoking Mirror: Living in Latin America Amsterdam Meulenhoff, 1987
  • The Prosecutor and the Judge Amsterdam University Press Pallas, 2009