Christina Lamb

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Christina Lamb
File:Christina Lamb.jpg
Born (1966-05-15) 15 May 1966 (age 57)
London, United Kingdom
Occupation Journalist, columnist
Education University College, Oxford
Harvard University
Genre Journalism, history
Spouse Paulo Anunciacao
Children Lourenço
Website
christinalamb.net

Christina Lamb OBE (born 15 May 1966) is a British journalist who is currently Foreign Correspondent for The Sunday Times. She was educated at University College, Oxford (BA in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics) and was a Nieman Fellow at Harvard University. She is a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society. She has won Foreign Correspondent of the year four times.

Journalistic career

Lamb says she always wanted to be a writer and be able to write about other people. The sense of adventure was the real draw to the career. In her book Small Wars Permitting: Dispatches from Foreign Lands she says she used to be mischievous at school and wasn't particularly studious in lessons. She gained entry into Oxford but soon changed from a chemistry degree to enroll in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics. Her journalistic career began at the Financial Times as a summer intern, it was here she described the foreign correspondents as 'Man-like-Gods' in reference to their gender and the exoticness of their lives and suitcases, it was something she wanted to be a part of.

Her first major interview was with Benazir Bhutto in London in 1987 where subsequently she was then invited to her wedding in Pakistan later that year. From here, she began her life as a foreign correspondent in Pakistan, journeying through Kashmir and along the frontiers of neighbouring Afghanistan, a place where the Mujahideen were fighting the Soviets occupiers. In her time she interviewed and became good friends with many in the local community including future Afghan President Hamid Karzai. She was deported back to London, by a less than friendly Inter-Services Intelligence, who did not like the content of her journalism and views from within the country and she was banned to enter in country.[1] Lamb was soon posted to Brazil and fell in love with the country and its whole culture and romanticism. She interviewed the then President Fernando Affonso Collor de Mello who was embroiled in corruption and influence peddling scheme. She moved briefly to Harvard University to become a Nieman Fellow where she met her future husband, Paulo Anunciacao.

She then moved to post-apartheid South Africa but did not have the same love for it as she did in Brazil. Throughout the next ten years she floated between London, Portugal, Zimbabwe, Brazil, Iraq, Pakistan and Afghanistan.

She married Paulo in Zanzibar in early 1999 and gave birth to Lourenço that summer, the next day she interviewed the former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet, who was being held under house arrest at Wentworth. Lamb describes her most harrowing reporting on the plight of Zimbabwe. Since 1994, she has described the devastation and destruction by Robert Mugabe and how it seems to be getting worse every time she returns.

In 2006, Lamb was with reporting with the British Parachute Regiment on a 'hearts and minds' mission in Southern Afghanistan. After a meeting with town elders, they were directed to a safe route out of the dwelling. Soon after they had left the British were attacked by Taliban fighters. Lamb describes how for two and half hours, with no air support, they ran through irrigation trenches under RPG, Kalashnikov and mortar fire from all directions. Soldiers were discussing among each other about saving bullets for themselves if it became inevitable, Lamb was asked if she had ever used a pistol. Fortunately, they were able to escape after such a close encounter.

In 2013 she co-authored the autobiography of Malala Yousafzai "I Am Malala: The Girl Who Stood Up For Education and Was Shot By The Taliban"[2] In the same year, Lamb joined the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars as a Wilson Center Global Fellow.[3] Her latest book entitled "Farewell Kabul" exhaustively details her many years in Afghanistan and Pakistan offering a close up account of the long war and its many missed opportunities on the part of the US on account of its tortured relationship with Pakistan. Her book essentially lays the problems of terrorism in the region, if not in the world, on that country's door.[4]

Affiliations

Lamb is a member of the Institute for War and Peace Reporting's International Board of Directors.[5]

Awards

Lamb was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2013 New Year Honours for services to journalism.[6]

Bibliography

References

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  2. http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/oct/07/malala-yousafzai-hard-to-kill-taliban
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  4. http://www.harpercollins.co.uk/9780007287277/farewell-kabul
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  6. The London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 60367. p. 12. 29 December 2012.

Sources

By Christina Lamb

About Christina Lamb