February 11, 2009 5:01 PM
- Text
Missing Peace Corps Teacher Found Dead
(CBS/AP)
The last entry in Peace Corps volunteer Julia Campbell's Internet blog said she was "buhay pa," a Filipino phrase for "still alive."
The Jan. 13 posting, which detailed her experiences surviving a massive typhoon, explained that she quickly adopted the phrase soon after arriving in the country two years ago, calling it the most familiar response when Filipinos are asked how they are doing.
On Wednesday, soldiers found her body in a shallow grave in the northern Philippines, where she had been hiking solo.
The remains of Campbell, 40, of Fairfax, Va., were found buried in a dry creek near Batad village, regional police commander Chief Superintendent Raul Gonzales said. Officials at the site confirmed that the body belonged to Campbell. It was to be airlifted Thursday to Manila.
"There is a probability that there was foul play," Gonzales told the AP, adding the police will now treat it as "a crime incident."
Police earlier speculated that Campbell may have fallen off a cliff. She went missing April 8 in the village outside Banaue town in Ifugao province north of Manila, where she had planned to view famed mountainside rice terraces.
Ifugao provincial police chief Senior Superintendent Pedro Ganir told the AP by telephone that a stray dog had dug out one foot when soldiers discovered the body, which was placed in the creek and covered with dirt.
A pair of reading glasses was found near a trail about 160 feet from the body, with one of the lenses laying nearby. Police also recovered a sandal they believed belonged to the woman.
"This is no longer an accident," he said.
Campbell's family has said the daughter of a former U.S. Marine captain was an "alert and careful traveler," not easily duped by people with "malevolent intent."
"She knows how to look out for herself. Julia Campbell is not an easy target," the family said in a profile they put together during the 10-day search for her.
A former long-distance runner, the 40-year-old Campbell had worked as freelance journalist for The New York Times, Fox.com, CourtTV.com, People magazine and Star magazine, and was a producer for ABCNews.com. In December, she contributed a story for CNN after supertyphoon Durian devastated Albay province, where she was working as an English teacher.
Her family said she was a certified yoga instructor who loved to sample different cultures — traveling extensively throughout Europe, Morocco, Cambodia, Thailand and Vietnam — and a caring person who would give away her last cent to anyone in need, working as Red Cross volunteer after 9/11.
"These qualities and the many others she embodies led her to embrace her most recent career choice to join the Peace Corps," her family said.
In a May 27, 2005, blog entry — two weeks before she was officially sworn in as a volunteer — Campbell anticipated the "beginning of my journey here" where she will "no longer have the comfort of fellow Americans within reach."
"I will be left to my own devices in a strange place with people and a culture I barely know. Though it is both terrifying and exciting, I look forward to finally starting what I came here to do: to immerse myself in a foreign culture, speak the language and try to do some good in the world," she wrote. "Let the games begin."
Campbell earned an English degree from James Madison University and was accepted into the Wagner's Master of Public Administration in Public and Nonprofit Management and Policy program at New York University. She had intended to begin postgraduate studies this fall.
She taught English at the Divine World College in Legazpi city in Albay province, southeast of Manila, during the second term, beginning in October 2006.
Her immediate superior, Assistant Dean Nora Gallano of the school's College of Liberal Arts, called her a kind, generous, friendly person who was dedicated to her work.
"Everybody likes her," she said.
The Jan. 13 posting, which detailed her experiences surviving a massive typhoon, explained that she quickly adopted the phrase soon after arriving in the country two years ago, calling it the most familiar response when Filipinos are asked how they are doing.
On Wednesday, soldiers found her body in a shallow grave in the northern Philippines, where she had been hiking solo.
The remains of Campbell, 40, of Fairfax, Va., were found buried in a dry creek near Batad village, regional police commander Chief Superintendent Raul Gonzales said. Officials at the site confirmed that the body belonged to Campbell. It was to be airlifted Thursday to Manila.
"There is a probability that there was foul play," Gonzales told the AP, adding the police will now treat it as "a crime incident."
Police earlier speculated that Campbell may have fallen off a cliff. She went missing April 8 in the village outside Banaue town in Ifugao province north of Manila, where she had planned to view famed mountainside rice terraces.
Ifugao provincial police chief Senior Superintendent Pedro Ganir told the AP by telephone that a stray dog had dug out one foot when soldiers discovered the body, which was placed in the creek and covered with dirt.
A pair of reading glasses was found near a trail about 160 feet from the body, with one of the lenses laying nearby. Police also recovered a sandal they believed belonged to the woman.
"This is no longer an accident," he said.
Campbell's family has said the daughter of a former U.S. Marine captain was an "alert and careful traveler," not easily duped by people with "malevolent intent."
"She knows how to look out for herself. Julia Campbell is not an easy target," the family said in a profile they put together during the 10-day search for her.
A former long-distance runner, the 40-year-old Campbell had worked as freelance journalist for The New York Times, Fox.com, CourtTV.com, People magazine and Star magazine, and was a producer for ABCNews.com. In December, she contributed a story for CNN after supertyphoon Durian devastated Albay province, where she was working as an English teacher.
Her family said she was a certified yoga instructor who loved to sample different cultures — traveling extensively throughout Europe, Morocco, Cambodia, Thailand and Vietnam — and a caring person who would give away her last cent to anyone in need, working as Red Cross volunteer after 9/11.
"These qualities and the many others she embodies led her to embrace her most recent career choice to join the Peace Corps," her family said.
In a May 27, 2005, blog entry — two weeks before she was officially sworn in as a volunteer — Campbell anticipated the "beginning of my journey here" where she will "no longer have the comfort of fellow Americans within reach."
"I will be left to my own devices in a strange place with people and a culture I barely know. Though it is both terrifying and exciting, I look forward to finally starting what I came here to do: to immerse myself in a foreign culture, speak the language and try to do some good in the world," she wrote. "Let the games begin."
Campbell earned an English degree from James Madison University and was accepted into the Wagner's Master of Public Administration in Public and Nonprofit Management and Policy program at New York University. She had intended to begin postgraduate studies this fall.
She taught English at the Divine World College in Legazpi city in Albay province, southeast of Manila, during the second term, beginning in October 2006.
Her immediate superior, Assistant Dean Nora Gallano of the school's College of Liberal Arts, called her a kind, generous, friendly person who was dedicated to her work.
"Everybody likes her," she said.
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