Talal Al-Haj

Talal Al-Haj is an award-winning Iraqi Journalist. He is the current New York/United Nations Bureau Chief for the Al-Arabiya news network.[1]

Talal Al-Haj
Born
Baghdad, Iraq;
Raised in England
OccupationJournalist
Home townLondon, England
TitleAl Arabiya
NY/U.N Bureau Chief
Spouse(s)Anita
ChildrenSharif and Jamal
Websitehttp://www.alarabiya.net/english

Early life and education

He previously lived in the UK for over 30 years where he studied and pursued his MA in Broadcast Journalism at the University of Westminster in 1995, whilst working for the BBC in London.

Early career

In the UK he worked at the BBC for its Arabic News Service. He was based in London for many years before moving to head the U.S. bureau for Al-Jazeera in 1997.[2] As such, Talal Al-Haj was the first Bureau Chief in Washington, D.C. for Al-Jazeera's Satellite Channel. He established the first U.S bureau for Al-Jazeera in the US Capital in 1997 and remained there until October 2000.[3]

In 2002 he was appointed Abu Dhabi TV's Bureau Chief in New York. For two years he covered all UN events and deliberations that preceded the March 2003 Iraq war. During this period he conducted numerous exclusive interviews with UN Secretary General Kofi Annan, UNMOVIC, IAEA Chiefs and a host of Ambassadors of the permanent and elected member states of the Security Council.[4]

Career at Al-Arabiya

In April 2006 he conducted a one-on-one 22 minute exclusive interview with former U.S Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld amid calls from retired generals for him to resign.[5][6]

In August 2006 Mr. Al-Haj's reporting on the First Mehlis 1st report on Hariri’s murder was nominated for the finals in the International Emmys "Breaking News Category." This made him the first Arab journalist to be nominated for a television News Emmy. He is also a blue ribbon judge in the International Emmys in which he is entrusted with judging the finalists.

In November 2007 he won a United Nations UNCA Gold Award for Electronic UN Coverage (Television). This made him the first Arab Journalist to win a UNCA Gold Award (or an UNCA award of any kind) for his press coverage of the UN.

In 2010 Talal Al-Haj won again UNCA Gold Award for best Broadcast Coverage of the UN and its agencies.[1]

Early morning on 10 July 2008 Talal Al-Haj broke the story on Al-Arabiya of the up-and-coming indictment of President Omar Bashir of Sudan on crimes against humanity, war crimes and genocide in Darfur. The story was then followed worldwide and was later announced on 14 July 2008 by the International Criminal Court in the Hague, Netherlands.[7]

He continues to work for Al-Arabiya as their NY/U.N bureau Chief based at the United Nations in New York.

Notable achievements

He has been an accredited correspondent at the White House, the Congress, U.S. Department of State, the Pentagon, the United Nations and the New York City Police Department.

Mr. Al-Haj holds the record of 8 sit down interviews with SG Kofi Annan, including the last TV sit-down interview Annan gave before leaving office after 10 years as Secretary General of the U.N on Dec 22nd 2006. To date Mr. Al-Haj has had 8 sit-down interviews with Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon since coming into office in January 2007. This so far is the record number given of one-on-one interviews given by Secretary General Ban Ki-moon to any journalist.

He has posed questions to and conducted interviews with, a wide range of political figures including, President George W. Bush, President Bill Clinton, President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt, the late Palestinian President Yasser Arafat, President Mahmoud Abbas, Vice President Ali Othman Taha of Sudan, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, former Prime Minister Ehud Barak, former State secretaries Madeleine Albright, Colin Powell and Condoleezza Rice.[8] He also interviewed former Deputy Defense Secretary John Hambre, former Under Secretary of Defense Walter B. Slocombe, former President of Israel Moshe Katsav, Ambassador John Bolton, Ambassador Zalmay Khalil Zad. He also interviewed a host of Arab and world leaders such as Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Salih, Algerian President Abd Al-Aziz Boutaflika. As well as several Arab foreign ministers that include countries such as Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Iraq, Sudan, Syria and others.

gollark: Or, well, is moderately complex but can be abstracted.
gollark: Anyway, I *do* see an issue with it. It has a lot of verbosity and fiddly bits for something which is not complicated.
gollark: Otherwise I would just use python.
gollark: It's part of a small project called "openring" I tweaked a bit.
gollark: You could probably work out *something* with channels, but honestly I think it would be harder to understand than some iterator-based approach.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.