
Gavin Bell and his wife Claire
Gavin Bell, daredevil foreign correspondent, travel writer and author, has died aged 78 after a long illness.
In a career spanning more than 60 years, which included being serenaded by Archbishop Desmond Tutu and offered personal protection (which he refused) by Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, he was the first non-French journalist to witness a nuclear explosion at Mururoa Atoll in the South Pacific.
His written works included books on South Africa, Robert Louis Stevenson, and lower leagues football.
Bell worked for Reuters from 1975 to 1986, based in London, Beirut and Paris, then spent seven years at The Times as an arts correspondent in London and foreign correspondent in Delhi, Seoul and Johannesburg.
He covered South Africa’s transition from apartheid to democracy, including the release from prison in 1990 of Nelson Mandela after 27 years in prison.
He recalled going to interview Archbishop Desmond Tutu in Namibia and being greeted with a rendition of I belong to Glasgow in a broad Glaswegian accent.
Bell’s mother accorded pride of place in her home to a picture of Tutu signed: “Mrs Bell, you’ve got a grand wee son.”
Covering the civil war in Lebanon, he answered his door to find a masked gunman wielding a Kalashnikov assault rifle bearing a personal offer from Arafat to provide personal protection.
Bell refused and was later visited again to be told the offer had been withdrawn.
His first job as a journalist was as a sports reporter for his father’s news agency in Paisley, then became a journalist specialising in football and athletics for the Dundee Evening Telegraph , Sunday Post and Weekly News.
Friends remembered him as a trendy figure driving a BMW convertible, the roof usually open no matter what the weather.
Like his father a talented runner (he completed seven marathons), prior to the opening of the Olympics in Seoul in 1988 he carried the Olympic Torch on one of the legs into the stadium.
A copy of the Torch, featured on BBC’s Antiques Road Show, remained one of his most treasured possessions.
Bell was a news reporter on the Daily Record in the late 60s and early 70s. From 1995-97 he was a senior features writer and columnist on The Herald , and from 1999-2001 chief features writer on The Scotsman .
For the past 24 years he was a travel writer for, among others, the Daily Telegraph , The Times and Sunday Times, The Guardian , Herald and others, and won awards from tourist boards in Canada, Sweden, Italy and the Caribbean.
He was the author of ‘In Search of Tusitala’ (Samoan for writer of stories) about Robert Louis Stevenson’s passage through the remote communities of French Polynesia, Hawaii, Kiribati and Samoa.
Ex-Reuters correspondent Fred Bridgland who met Bell in South Africa when he worked for the Sunday Telegraph and The Scotsman, recalled: “Gavin described to me some of his fantastic experiences while researching this book: the sheer wonder of scuba diving in the in the South Pacific, of being carried by a powerful incoming tide between coral cliffs into Fiji’s Beqa Lagoon.
“Swept helplessly along by the currents, all around him were whales, bull-, tiger- and hammerhead sharks, giant
manta rays, turtles, schools of barracuda and dense shoals of other fish.”
His fascination with the sport led to the writing of ‘Because it’s Saturday – a journey into football’s heartland’, a book about lower league clubs in England and Scotland and the parts they play in local communities.
A fervent supporter of Motherwell football club, when it reached the Scottish Cup final in 1991 he abandoned the dramas in South Africa and, wearing his burgundy and gold scarf, flew back to watch it beat Dundee United 4-3 at Hampden Park.
Motherwell players of yesteryear signed a team shirt presented to him a few weeks before he died at his home on the fringe of a Glasgow wood.
South Africa had a special place in his heart. It was where he met his wife Claire, who died in August this year, and where they latterly spent half of each year with their daughter Fintry. Visitors to the hospice often found him writing essays to his daughter. His brother pre-deceased him.
He was a lover of music, especially classical and opera. In his last few months friends took him to concerts and shortly before his death he was still booking tickets several months ahead.
Email [email protected] to point out mistakes, provide story tips or send in a letter for publication on our “Letters Page” blog