Salman Masood

Salman Masood (Urdu: سلمان مسعود) is a Pakistani journalist who is a Pakistan Correspondent at The New York Times since 2001.[1][2] He is also the Resident Editor, Islamabad & Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa at The Nation. The focus of his reporting has been on politics and terrorism. In 2009, he contributed to The New York Times reporting team that won the Pulitzer Prize for coverage of Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Salman Masood
NationalityPakistan
OccupationJournalist
Years active2001-

Career

Masood has been working with The New York Times as its reporter since 2001, in Islamabad bureau.[2]

In the news

The Pakistan Rangers, a paramilitary force, conducted a warrantless search of Masood's home in Islamabad, ostensibly searching for a suspected terrorist unrelated to Masood, on 12 January 2016.[3] The Interior Ministry apologized for the incident and denied that Masood had been targeted. Journalists staged a walkout of the National Assembly of Pakistan.[2] Human Rights Watch condemned the incident.[4][5][6] On Jan 8, 2020, Salman Masood was promoted as the Editor of The Nation newspaper.<ref> http://www.journalismpakistan.com/the-nation-promotes-salman-masood-as-editor <ref>https://nation.com.pk/E-Paper/islamabad/2020-01-09/page-1/detail-3

Personal life and education

Salman Masood was born and raised in Islamabad. He holds a master's degree in international relations from Quaid-i-Azam University, Islamabad.[1]

gollark: It's not that you became unconscious, it's that you injured your brain somewhat and that caused you to become unconscious.
gollark: ... head trauma is actually pretty bad for you, though?
gollark: Phones seem to continually be growing in size for no apparent reason and as someone with small hands it's quite annoying.
gollark: That sounds very finger-soreness-inducing.
gollark: Meh.

References


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