Jonathan_Wright_(translator)

Jonathan Wright (translator)

Jonathan Wright (translator)

British journalist and literary translator


Jonathan Wright is a British journalist and literary translator.

Biography

Wright was born in Andover, Hampshire, and spent his childhood in Canada, Malaysia, Hong Kong and Germany. He attended Packwood Haugh School from 1966 to 1967 and Shrewsbury School from 1967 to 1971. He studied Arabic, Turkish and Islamic civilisation at St John's College, Oxford. He joined Reuters news agency in 1980 as a correspondent, and has been based in the Middle East for most of the last three decades.[when?] He has served as Reuters' Cairo bureau chief, and he has lived and worked throughout the region, including in Egypt, Sudan, Lebanon, Tunisia and the Arabian Gulf region. From 1997 to 2003, he was based in Washington, DC, covering US foreign policy for Reuters. For two years until the autumn of 2011 Wright was editor of the Arab Media & Society Journal, published by the Kamal Adham Center for Journalism Training and Research at the American University in Cairo.[1]

Translations

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Kidnapping and escape

On 29 August 1984, while on a reporting assignment for Reuters in the Bekaa Valley, Lebanon, Wright was detained and held hostage by the Palestinian splinter group led by Abu Nidal in a part of the Lebanon hostage crisis.[3][4] The group wanted to exchange him for members imprisoned in Britain for shooting the Israeli ambassador, Shlomo Argov, in London in June 1982. Wright spent about one week in a small room in a country house near the town of Barr Elias and was then moved to a large villa near the Chouf mountain town of Bhamdoun, above Beirut. In the early hours of 16 September 1984, Wright escaped from captivity[5][6] by removing the plank of wood covering a ventilation hole and crawling through the hole, which was about 10 feet above floor level. He reached the hole by dismantling his metal bedstead and using the frame as a ladder. Once outside, he walked along the Beirut-Damascus highway until he reached a checkpoint manned by the mainly Druze Muslim Progressive Socialist Party. The party militia held him incommunicado at Aley police station until 19 September, when party leader Walid Jumblatt told his aides to drive him to the Reuters office in Beirut.[7] Wright has written a detailed account of his kidnapping and this is available here: https://docs.google.com/document/d/13ogEgKwU2Cccav4WPYizo3ePjbtTg1S6yQusoVwYXEM/edit

See also

Awards and honours


References

  1. "AUC newsletter on Wright's appointment". Archived from the original on 12 March 2012. Retrieved 23 June 2011.
  2. "Britain Asks Lebanon To Look for Journalist". The New York Times. 4 September 1984. Retrieved 7 August 2013.
  3. "Moslem Group Holding Journalist". The Calgary Herald. 5 September 1984. Retrieved 7 August 2013.
  4. Salameh, Rima (26 September 1986). "British reporter evades kidnapping in Moslem Beirut". Gainesville Sun. Retrieved 8 August 2013.
  5. "REUTERS REPORTER RECOUNTS LEBANON ESCAPE". The New York Times. Reuters. 23 September 1984. Retrieved 5 August 2017.
  6. "British Journalist Freed". The Deseret News. 22 September 1984. Retrieved 7 August 2013.
  7. "The 2013 Prize". Banipal Trust. 19 January 2014. Retrieved 19 January 2014.

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