In the summer of 1992, during the famine in
Somalia, Eldon flew to the Kenyan refugee camps. He began taking photographs for
Reuters and was among the international photographers and journalists present at the
US Marine landing in
Mogadishu. Eldon stayed in Mogadishu through to the next spring, during which time his pictures were featured in newspapers and magazines around the world. On 12 June 1993, his photo was featured as a double page spread in
Newsweek magazine. Prior to collapsing the
Central government, after the overthrow of the
Siad regime and preceding the
Somali famine throughout the covering of the famine and
civil war, he became popular and Mogadishu's residents nicknamed him the "
Mayor of Mogadishu."
Bloody Monday On 12 July 1993, an event occurred known to the Somalis as
Bloody Monday in which Eldon, German
Associated Press photographer Hansi Krauss, Kenyan
Reuters sound technician Anthony Macharia, and Kenyan Reuters photographer Hos Maina were murdered following a
United States airstrike on a gathering of top clan leaders of the
Habr Gidr. Survivors of the raid went to the journalists' hotel requesting them to take pictures. In a convoy, under the protection of Somalis, Eldon and a group of colleagues went to the bombed area. Some witnesses and former US officials later stated that the raid accidentally hit a meeting of clan elders who were hoping to pressure Aidid into peace, a claim denied by the US Army. As they began to take photographs, Eldon, Krauss, Macharia and Maina were attacked by a
mob and stoned and beaten to death. One soldier who participated in the attack claimed the Army viewed Eldon and the other journalists as
collateral damage, stating, "We were considering people that I previously considered not expendable, expendable." ==Film adaptation==