"60 Minutes" reporter Lara Logan, who was sexually assaulted in Egypt last 2011 while she was covering the Arab Springs protest, was again readmitted at a hospital still from the injuries she got from the attack.
People shared that the 43-year-old correspondent was hospitalized on Monday in Washington D.C. and it stemmed from the complications she continues to suffer from the brutal attack. A spokesperson from "60 Minutes" released a statement saying that they are hoping for the speedy recovery of Logan.
Logan was attacked when she was separated from her bodyguard while they were in Tahrir Square in Cairo. Logan and her team were reportedly surrounded by a mob and that's when the mob took her and sexually assaulted her.
Logan was admitted due to diverticulitis, an intestinal disease, and she also suffered from internal bleeding last February. According to a source close to Logan, the reporter was hospitalized at least four times this 2015.
According to Huffington Post, Logan is undergoing a lot of physical suffering from the attack because the mother of two suffered from sexual assault and beating. Logan was saved by a group of women and around 20 Egyptian soldiers. She is one of the many journalists attacked during the said protests that lead to the ousting of the Egyptian president that year.
Logan once talked about the suffering she experienced months after the brutal attack and she shared that during the attack, she made a note to herself that she is not just going to die but she was to experience a torturous death that seemed to go on for forever.
Logan continued to be part of "60 Minutes" but back in November 2013, she was placed on a leave of absence due to a report talked about the September 2012 attack on the U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi. She reportedly based her report on discredited reports.