FILE - In this April 13, 1999, file photo, Pentagon spokesman Kenneth Bacon speaks to reporters at the Pentagon in Washington. Bacon who became a voice for millions of refugees uprooted by violence and conflict around the world, died …
FILE - In this April 13, 1999, file photo, Pentagon spokesman Kenneth Bacon speaks to reporters at the Pentagon in Washington. Bacon who became a voice for millions of refugees uprooted by violence and conflict around the world, died …
Updated: Sunday, 16 Aug 2009, 7:43 AM EDT
Published : Sunday, 16 Aug 2009, 7:42 AM EDT
WASHINGTON (AP) - Kenneth Bacon, a Pentagon spokesman in the Clinton administration who became a voice for millions of refugees uprooted by violence and conflict, died Saturday of skin cancer that had spread to his brain. He was 64.
His death at his vacation home in Block Island was announced by Refugees International, a Washington-based advocacy group that Bacon had led since 2001.
"Most Americans remember Ken as the unflappable civilian voice of the Department of Defense," Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said in a statement. "But for millions of the world's most vulnerable people -- refugees and other victims of conflict -- Ken was an invaluable source of hope, inspiration and support."
After a long career as a Wall Street Journal reporter and editor, Bacon joined the Clinton administration in 1994 as assistant secretary of defense for public affairs. He became familiar to the public as the bow-tie wearing Pentagon spokesman.
It was in that job, during U.S. and NATO operations in Kosovo,
when Bacon grew convinced that more people were needed to stop
human rights abuses and assist people displaced by manmade
and
natural disasters.
He became president of Refugees International in 2001. During
his tenure, the group doubled in size and advocated for increased
protection and assistance for displaced people in places such as
Sudan's Darfur region and Iraq, where he focused much of his
own work, as well as in Afghanistan, Democratic Republic of Congo,
Colombia, Thailand and Myanmar, also known as Burma.
Survivors include his wife, Darcy Wheeler Bacon; two daughters,
Katharine Bacon of Brookline, Mass., and Sarah Bacon of Brooklyn,
N.Y.; his father, Theodore S. Bacon of Peterborough, N.H.; a
brother; and two grandchildren.
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