Background
Of Dutch extraction, van Beynen was born in Christchurch.
Of Dutch extraction, van Beynen was born in Christchurch.
He was educated at Street Peter"s College, Auckland where he played rugby union. He attended the University of Auckland where he studied law, graduating in 1981. After "a number of diversions" including working overseas, van Beynan completed a Diploma of Journalism at the University of Otago in 1989 and started working with the Otago Daily Times in Dunedin.
He lived in west Auckland from the age of 11. He gained a Master of Arts in 1982. Van Beynen is married with three children and lives in Diamond Harbour, Banks Peninsula.
Van Beynen joined The Press in Christchurch in 1991 and after a number of roles was appointed Senior Writer in 2004.
He is now a Senior journalist and a leading columnist on the The Press. His views have, at times, been controversial.
An example was his opinion piece relating to "Breakfast for Canterbury" put on by Television New Zealand following the 2010 Canterbury earthquake. This piece began: "As dawn broke over the ruined city, God decided to punish the urbanites one more time.
He sent them Paul Henry and his Breakfast television team
Billed as Breakfast for Canterbury, the Auckland television people came down once more to feast on the already well-gnawed bones of injured Christchurch". He also made trenchant comment on, and took a controversial position in relation to, aspects of the David Bain retrial. Van Beynen was accused of approaching a juror in that retrial, which has led to criticism of him by an official of the High Court and media outlets.
In 2012 van Beynen published "Trapped", an account of experiences of the 2011 Christchurch earthquake.
Van Beynen has won significant journalism awards in New Zealand. In 2010, as well as other awards, he won a Qantas Media Award for "Story of the Year" for a feature after the trial and acquittal of David Bain. He was also announced "Fairfax Media Journalist of the Year 2010-2011". Van Beynen dominated the individual categories of the 2012 Canon Media (previously called the Qantas Media ). He was named Senior Reporter of the Year and Senior Newspaper Feature Writer of the Year, and awarded a Wolfson Fellowship to Cambridge University, which allows him to study at the university in 2013.