Charles Foley (journalist)

Charles Foley (1908 1995)[1] was an Indian-born British journalist.

Biography

Foley was born in India in 1908 and began working as a journalist in Paris on the Paris Herald, a European edition of the New York Herald now known as the International Herald Tribune. From 1940 to 1955 he served as Foreign Editor on the British newspaper The Daily Express. In 1954 he interviewed Hitler's former commando chief, Otto Skorzeny – then living in Madrid. Foley subsequently wrote Commando Extraordinary, Otto Skorzeny (Longman Green, London, 1954), a well-crafted but laudatory account of Skorzeny's war-time exploits.

In 1955 Foley moved to Cyprus and took over The Cyprus Times newspaper at a moment in the islands history when a civil war was breaking out between Greek and Turkish Cypriots, and the Greek Cypriot EOKA movement was starting an armed struggle against the British colonial government in Cyprus.[2] He later published a number of books on Cyprus.

  • Island in revolt (London: Longmans, 1962)
  • Cyprus: Legacy of Strife (London: Penguin Books, 1962)
  • The struggle for Cyprus [together with W. I. Scobie] (Stanford, Calif.: Hoover Institution Press, 1975).

He also published The memoirs of General Grivas (London: Longmans, 1964), approved by the military leader of EOKA, Georgios Grivas.

References

  1. Charles Foley's profile at the National Library of Australia
  2. 'The Press: Tough Times' in Time Magazine, 15 September 1958.



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