Sumaya Sadurni, who has died aged 32 in a automobile crash in northwestern Uganda, was a proficient freelance photographer whose work was printed on the planet’s most famous publications, together with the Monetary Instances.
A Ugandan NGO employee, Thomas Mugisha, additionally died within the accident. Deeply emotional, dedicated to her tales, and very humorous, Sadurni was a pressure of nature — the perfect companion for reporting round east Africa.
In August final 12 months, whereas she was on project with me for the FT in South Sudan, we have been threatened with arrest for no purpose. Ultimately, after getting an earful from Sadurni, the native head of nationwide safety determined to not put us in a cell however despatched us again to our lodgings. “Go, I heard sufficient,” he mentioned, slamming on his desk. “Me too,” she retorted, slamming the commander’s workplace door.
“I had a good time, qué risa!” or what amusing we had, she texted after parting methods and returning to Kampala, the place she lived.
The Ugandan capital proved difficult at occasions too. In 2020, whereas masking a tense and at occasions violent election marketing campaign, Sadurni was singled out as a foe, with out justification, by officers loyal to president Yoweri Museveni. But she continued working.
“She went by way of so a lot bother to comply with us and report the reality,” mentioned Ugandan opposition chief Robert Kyagulanyi, often known as Bobi Wine, who stood in opposition to Museveni in final 12 months’s election. “She was a robust journalist, at all times humorous, by no means fearing the highly effective.”
Of Mexican and Spanish descent, Sumaya Sadurni Carrasco was born in Santiago on the finish of the dictatorial reign of Augusto Pinochet. She spent most of her youth roving round Latin America earlier than settling in Switzerland for highschool. After graduating from the UK’s College of Westminster she went again to Chile to cowl the coed protests within the early 2010s earlier than spending time within the UK photographing one in all her passions, heavy metallic gigs.
After a visit to Uganda in 2016 to see a childhood pal, she determined to base herself there and travelled usually across the continent the place she demonstrated her expertise as a photographer and attraction as a human being — dancing with South Sudanese rebels and South African thugs alike. Her footage supplied a window on to a continent the place her mates have been legion.
“She was an unimaginable younger lady, lively and love for Uganda,” mentioned David Pilling, the FT’s Africa editor. “She took dangers for us in South Sudan to assist deliver one other story she cared deeply about to a wider viewers.”
Certainly, for Sumy, as she was identified by everybody, every little thing went deep, particularly so when it got here to ladies who survived traumas — from warfare wounds to acid assaults. “Sumy was captivated with everybody she photographed. She constructed belief, respect and love with each lady earlier than taking their {photograph},” mentioned Catherine Byaruhanga, a detailed pal of Sadurni who’s the BBC Information Africa correspondent. “‘I like you’ have been three phrases Sumy by no means withheld. Her hugs have been deep and stuffed with emotion.” She is survived by her dad and mom and her brother Jorge.