After his graduation, he moved to
Brussels and started to cover the unfolding civil war in Yugoslavia. In the following years, he became a full-time war correspondent, covering the conflicts in Haiti, Rwanda, Colombia, Afghanistan, Sierra Leone and Sudan for publications in the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany and the USA. In 1998 Voeten became headline news in the Netherlands when he went missing during the civil war in
Sierra Leone. The Dutch Journalist Association NVJ was ready to send a search mission of fellow journalists, when Voeten resurfaced after hiding for two weeks from rebels searching for him. In 2000, Voeten was accepted in the London-based agency
Panos Pictures, and moved to New York. Together with writer
Sebastian Junger, he made several reportages for
Vanity Fair about the mass killings in Kosovo,
blood diamonds in Sierra Leone, the civil war in Liberia, women-trafficking on the Balkans, American army units in Afghanistan and the controversial Chinese entrepreneurs in Africa. In 2001, together with writer
Andrew Cockburn, he covered the trail of conflict diamonds in Sierra Leone,
DR Congo and Angola for
National Geographic magazine. Voeten arrived in Baghdad just after the American-led invasion of 2003 and photographed the immediate aftermath of the war. Six months later he returned to Iraq and was embedded with the US forces for ''
Maclean's'' magazine with Canadian writer
Sacha Trudeau. Over the last years, Voeten photographed the American troops in Afghanistan a few more times more. He also worked in the Gaza strip (Israeli bombardments), the DR Congo (ongoing civil war) and North Korea (daily life and socialist-realist architecture) as well as the refugee crisis in the Darfur area. He also focused on more documentary subjects such as daily life in Iran and coal mining and pollution in China. He later covered the Mexican drug war and the Arab uprisings of 2012 in Egypt and Libya. From 2014 to 2017, he also photographed in Syria and Iraq.
CNN published his architectural photographs of the destruction of Sinjar. Work from Voeten has appeared in
Vanity Fair,
The New Yorker,
The New York Times Magazine,
National Geographic,
Newsweek,
Time,
Granta,
Village Voice,
Vrij Nederland,
De Volkskrant,
NRC,
De Standaard and the
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. He is also a contributor for humanitarian agencies such as International Committee of the Red Cross, Human Rights Watch,
Médecins sans frontières,
UNHCR and
Amnesty International and other non-governmental organizations. ==Publications==