- Toby Harnden
Toby Harnden (born 1966) is a
United States -based British journalist and author.Since October 2006, he has been the U.S. editor for
London 's "The Daily Telegraph ". He was previously Chief Foreign Correspondent for the "Sunday Telegraph ", reporting fromIraq ,Afghanistan ,Israel , theOccupied Palestinian Territories ,Lebanon ,Bahrain ,Zimbabwe ,Mozambique ,Austria ,Italy ,Estonia ,Saudi Arabia ,Pakistan , theUnited States andThailand .He is from
Manchester and took his degree atCorpus Christi College, Oxford , being awarded a First in Modern History in 1988 as well as being president of the Junior Common Room (JCR). After nearly 10 years as an officer in theRoyal Navy , he became a journalist, beginning his new career initially as a theatre reviewer at theEdinburgh Fringe Festival and anobituaries writer. Fact|date=November 2007As well as the Telegraph titles, he has worked for the "Leith Leader", "
The Scotsman ", "Western Morning News" (Plymouth, England) and "The Independent ". He has had articles published in "The Guardian ", "The Wall Street Journal ", "The Sun",The Spectator ", "The Evening Standard ", "The Literary Review ", "Naval Review","East End Life", "The Sunday Business Post" (Dublin), "The Daily Star" (Beirut) and the "Conde Nast Traveller".He has been married since 2006 to Cheryl Bosse; they live in northern
Virginia .From 1999 to 2003, he was the "
Daily Telegraph "'s Washington Bureau Chief. During two stints in theUnited States , he has reported from 48 out of 50 states, writing about American politics,US foreign policy and various aspects of American society. He was in Washington, D.C. on 9/11. Fact|date=June 2008He joined the "
Daily Telegraph " in 1994 as a home news reporter before being posted toBelfast as the newspaper'sIreland Correspondent in 1996. He subsequently covered theGood Friday Agreement and theOmagh bombing of 1998 as well as numerousexplosions ,ceasefire s,shooting s,riot s, marches and political crises. The culmination of his work inNorthern Ireland was the publication of "Bandit Country: The IRA & South Armagh" (Hodder & Stoughton 1999), which has sold more than 150,000 copies worldwide.Before joining "
The Sunday Telegraph " in January 2005, he wasMiddle East Correspondent of the "Daily Telegraph ". He was based inJerusalem but travelled extensively throughout the region and spent much of 2004 covering the war inIraq . He was a "unilateral" reporter during thebattle of Najaf in August 2004 and three months later was embedded with theUS Army 's Task Force 2-2 during thebattle of Fallujah .In May 2005, he was imprisoned in
Zimbabwe for 14 days after being arrested at a rural polling station on the day of the country's parliamentary elections and deported following acquittal on a charge of "practicing journalism without accreditation".He writes a regular blog at [http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/foreign/tobyharnden Harnden blog] .
Links
* [http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/foreign/tobyharnden Harnden blog]
* [http://www.tobyharnden.com/ Official website]Works
* "Bandit Country -The IRA and South Armagh", Hodder & Stoughton, London, 1999. ISBN 0-340-71736-X
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