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NEW DELHI (AP) - Dilip Ganguly, whose 21-year career at The Associated Press saw him report from Baghdad during the Gulf War, on the aftermath of the Rwandan genocide and on stories across South Asia, died on Sunday. He was 57.
Ganguly, in a coma since suffering a brain hemorrhage on July 14, died in Calcutta, the eastern Indian city where he was based, said his son, Shonal Ganguly.
"Dilip loved being a journalist. His career had taken him around the world and he had shown repeatedly through his hard work and his earnestness just how good a journalist he could be," said Tim Sullivan, the AP's chief of bureau in New Delhi.
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