|
 |
| |
|
Simpson, John (Adventure / Exploration /
Wildlife) BBC World Affairs Editor, Author and Columnist
|
| |
|
John Simpson is an accomplished public and keynote speaker
and enthralling after dinner speaker fascinating audiences
across the world with his lively and entertaining talks and
lectures. With over 40 years experience in international
journalism he has the ability to cover topics from highly
factual and intense World Affairs to more light-hearted and
amusing tales from his extensive travels. |
|
a |
|
John Simpson is the BBC's World Affairs Editor, the senior
member of a team of London-based foreign and specialist
correspondents and has recently been in Northern Iraq
reporting on the recent conflict. In a BBC career spanning
more than 40 years - he joined as a trainee journalist in
1966 - John has earned a reputation as one of the World's
most experienced and authoritative journalists. His first
job with the BBC was as a trainee sub editor in Radio News
in 1966. John has reported from more than 100 countries
across the globe, from 30 war zones and has interviewed
numerous controversial world leaders including Sadam
Hussein, Osama Bin Laden, Nelson Mandela, Margaret Thatcher,
Mikhail Gorbachev, Yasser Arafat, Colonel Gadhaffi,
Ayatollah Khomeini, Robert Mugabe and the Emperor Bokassa. |
|
a |
|
One of John's more recent and demanding major assignments
was reporting from Afghanistan during the fall of Kabul.
John also reported from Belgrade during the Kosovo crisis of
1999. He was one of only a handful of journalists to remain
in the Serbian capital when the authorities expelled those
from Nato countries at the start of the conflict. "As
everyone else was pulling out I decided I would just stay
put and see what happened," he said. For the next 12 weeks
he filed reports every day and often round-the-clock for all
BBC services, and was the first BBC journalist in a war zone
to answer questions from Internet users via BBC News Online. |
|
a |
|
In April 2000, he was named RTS (Royal Television Society)
Journalist of the Year for his reporting of the conflict. |
|
a |
|
In a career which makes visiting trouble spots a way of
life, John says he rarely fears for his safety - even when a
Palestinian soldier ordered him to kneel in the road and
held a gun to his head and, just recently, when a 'friendly
fire' anti-tank bomb was dropped and detonated a few yards
from him in Iraq, killing his translator and showering John
with shrapnel. |
|
a |
|
Other close shaves include being shelled in Afghanistan,
attacked with poisonous gas in the Gulf and dodging the
bullets in Tiananmen Square. John also had the honour as a
young reporter of being punched by Harold Wilson for asking
whether he was about to call an election. |
|
a |
|
John was appointed World Affairs Editor in 1988 following
periods as Diplomatic Editor and presenter of the Nine
O'clock News. Before that he worked as a correspondent in
South Africa, Brussels and Dublin. |
|
a |
|
John also presents a current and political affairs program
called Simpson's World. John Simpson's World is broadcast on
BBC World and BBC News 24, and is seen in 200 countries.
Each edition has an audience that has been estimated at 151
million viewers. In its five years, Simpson's World has
interviewed more than a hundred people in over forty
countries, and is one of BBC World's most popular programs. |
|
a |
|
From 1990-6 John was associate editor of 'The Spectator'.
Since 1996 he has written a foreign affairs column for The
Sunday Telegraph. His most recent books include an
autobiographical trilogy: 'Strange Places, Questionable
People' (1998), 'A Mad World, My Masters' (2000), 'News From
No Man's Land' (2002), 'The Wars Against Saddam' (2003)
became a 'bestseller' and is now available in paperback,
"Days from a Different World" was published September 2005
and his latest book - "Not Quite World's End" - was released
in October 2007. |
|
a |
|
John received a CBE in the (1991), and is one of only two
people to have been twice named the Royal Television
Society's 'Journalist of the Year' (1991 and 2000). Among
his other awards have been three BAFTA's, a Golden Nymph
Award for his reporting of Ayatollah Khomeini's return to
Iran (1979), a Peabody Trust Award for news (1999), a
special jury's award at the Bayeux War Correspondents Awards
(2002) and most recently an International Emmy Award for
News Coverage for his report on the fall of Kabul for BBC's
Ten O'clock News (2002), GQ Magazine "Author of the Year"
(2003) and in 2004 John received the award from Pan
MacMillan for the "Audio Book of the Year" for The Wars
Against Saddam (2004). In September 1999, Magdalene College
awarded John an honorary fellowship and, in November 2005,
John was installed as Chancellor of Roehampton University. |
|
a |
|
Born on 9 August 1944, John was brought up in London and
Suffolk, and educated at St Paul's School and Magdalene
College, Cambridge where he read English and edited the
magazine Granta. In September 1999, Magdalene College
awarded John an honorary fellowship. |
| |
|
|