Hugh Schofield

Hugh Robert Armstrong Schofield (born 19 August 1961),[1][2] is the Paris Correspondent for BBC News, the main newsgathering department of the BBC, and its 24-hour television news channels BBC World News and BBC News Channel, as well as the BBC's domestic television and radio channels and the BBC World Service. He was formerly a BBC correspondent across Europe, the Middle East and United States, with over 25 years' experience in reporting for BBC radio and television. He became BBC Paris Correspondent in 1996.

Hugh Schofield
Born (1961-08-19) 19 August 1961
EducationClifton College, Bristol
St John's College, Oxford
OccupationJournalist, editor, author
EmployerBBC
Agence France-Presse

Early life and education

Schofield was born in Cardiff in Glamorgan in South Wales, in 1961.[2] He has an elder brother, Philip, and a younger sister, Moira.[3]

In September 1974, after leaving prep school, Schofield was educated at Clifton College, a boarding independent school in the suburb of Clifton in the port city of Bristol in South West England. He entered the school at the age of thirteen as a scholar, where he boarded at School House, and left in summer 1978.[1] The following year, he went up to St John's College at the University of Oxford, where he studied Arabic and Turkish.

Schofield's older brother, Philip, was two years his senior at Clifton College although he entered in the same year, 1974. Philip went on to become an Exhibitioner in Modern Languages at Christ Church at the University of Oxford.[3] Schofield's younger sister, Moira, achieved first class honours in Italian at Trinity College, Dublin, in 1985.

Career

Schofield joined the BBC in the 1980s. He is the BBC's former correspondent in the Middle East, Spain, the United States and the former Yugoslavia, and has worked for the BBC in Paris since 1996. He appears frequently on radio, television and the Internet, covering day-to-day French news and providing analysis of politics and the economy. From 2000 to 2008, he was chief correspondent in Paris at the English Language Service of the Paris-based Agence France-Presse news agency.[4][5][6][7] In July 2016 Schofield wrote an article for BBC News Online in which he praised France for responding to the murder by Islamic State of a French priest, Father Jacques Hamel of Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray. Schofield accompanied the piece with a photograph of Adel Kermiche, the teenage jihadist who had attempted to behead Father Hamel, and a caption repeating the Archbishop of Rouen's quote "Forgive them – they know not what they do."[8]

gollark: Bee you. We will create 495 trillion simulations of you and subject them to mild inconveniences.
gollark: But it goes to power state 0 (max) at which it draws 12-20W, then stays there for several seconds, then goes to power state 8?
gollark: If I do nvidia-smi, it wakes up the Nvidia card from sleep, which makes some kind of sense.
gollark: Hmm. Nvidia power management is very eldritch.
gollark: Browsers_incursing_rapidly_into_all_spacetime

References

  1. Clifton College Register 1962–1978. Page no: 360. Entry no: 17112. Publisher: The Council of Clifton College. Published: October 1979. Retrieved: 7 March 2013.
  2. 'Births, Marriages & Deaths Index of England & Wales confirms name and birthdate and lists birthplace as Cardiff, Glamorgan. Publisher: General Register Office. Retrieved: 12 March 2013.
  3. Clifton College Register 1962–1978. Page no: 360. Entry no: 17113. Publisher: The Council of Clifton College. Published: October 1979. Retrieved: 7 March 2013.
  4. Hugh Schofield Archived 2012-05-09 at the Wayback Machine BBC Correspondents Map. Retrieved: 10 December 2012.
  5. The Parisian apartment code of conduct BBC News. Published: 23 April 2011. Retrieved: 10 December 2012.
  6. Hugh Schofield Archived 2014-02-04 at the Wayback Machine EU Conferences – Information-Registration. Retrieved 10 December 2012.
  7. Hugh Schofield – Biography Archived 2012-10-09 at the Wayback Machine Plateform International. Retrieved: 10 December 2012.
  8. France responds to attacks with calls for peace and understandingy BBC News Online. Retrieved: 28 July 2016.
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