(Source: Arab American National Museum press release)
Michigan Radio and the Arab American National Museum will present a panel discussion on Monday, June 7, titled Covering the Middle East: A Conversation with the BBC. This event will feature correspondents from the BBC, and will examine issues related to news reporting in this region, and how the BBC balances the demands of its global news audience in covering issues affecting the Middle East and the Arab World.
Covering the Middle East: A Conversation with the BBC will feature panelists from three different areas of the BBC. Lukman Ahmed (BBC Arabic Washington Correspondent), Liliane Landor (Head of the Middle East Region, BBC World Service), and Anne Koch (Deputy Director, BBC World Service English Networks) will each bring their unique perspective on news coverage in the Middle East to this discussion. Michigan Radio News Director Vincent Duffy will moderate.
This event is free and open to the public, and will begin at 7 p.m. Monday, June 7 in the Lower Level Auditorium at the Arab American National Museum, 13624 Michigan Ave. in Dearborn.
As the world’s leading international broadcaster, the BBC World Service delivers news to diverse audiences worldwide in 32 different languages. In addition to providing news on Middle Eastern events to listeners in the U.K. and the U.S. through its English language service, the BBC also provides an Arab language service that reaches listeners throughout the Middle East and the globe. This provides the BBC with a unique perspective on issues related to this area and the Arab World.
“Michigan Radio is pleased to present this discussion of an issue that will be of great interest to many people in our community,” says Michigan Radio News Director Vincent Duffy. “With the large concentration of people of Arab descent in Southeastern Michigan, having access to accurate, informed news coverage of the Middle East and Arab World is critically important.”
This event is an extension of Michigan Radio’s recent “Muslims in Michigan” project, in partnership with the University of Michigan Center for Middle Eastern and North African Studies.
Lukman Ahmed joined BBC Arabic as Chief Washington Correspondent in July 2007. He covers all U.S. stories for the BBC Arabic network on TV, radio and online – from politics to economy, space, medicine and technology. Lukman has interviewed top U.S. officials including President George W. Bush and former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, and covered the 2008 U.S. presidential election. He has also reported the U.S. military campaigns from Iraq and Afghanistan. Lukman has also presented the BBC Arabic flagship programmes, Open Agenda and The Fact-finding Commission.
Before joining the BBC, from 1998 till 2003, Lukman worked as the Washington Correspondent of the Middle East Broadcasting Centre, MBC, covering breaking news stories such as the 9/11 attacks. He then joined Al-Arabiya TV as Senior Washington Correspondent, covering key U.S. news stories, U.S. relations with African countries and policies in the Middle East. In these roles he has interviewed key U.S. political and government figures. Lukman started his journalistic career in 1987 as a news anchor for Sudan TV, before moving to the U.S. in 1995.
As Head of Middle East Region, BBC World Service, Liliane Landor is editorially and managerially responsible for TV and radio broadcasts as well as future media in Arabic. Landor has been working at the BBC since 1989, when she joined the BBC French service. She presented a news program in French before presenting Europe Today in the News and Current Affairs department of BBC World Service. Hers was one of the first non-British voices on air.
Two years later, Landor moved on to Newshour, BBC World Service’s flagship news and current-affairs program. When The World Today started, Landor became one of the program’s core presenters and subsequently the program’s editor. In January 2002, she joined the senior management team as Editor, Programs in News and Current Affairs, eventually becoming Head of BBC World Service News and Current Affairs in 2006 – responsible for all the BBC World Service News and Current Affairs programs in English.
Anne Koch is the Deputy Director, BBC World Service English Networks & News. Previously she was Commissioning Editor News, Current Affairs and Business at the World Service and prior to that, the Executive Editor of Radio Daily Current Affairs at BBC’s Radio 4. She joined the BBC in 1987 after working as a journalist in Canada and then with CBC’s London Bureau. Her first job with the BBC was as a Producer with The World At One and the PM programs. She went on to become the Deputy Editor of The World This Weekend and in April 1992 she joined The World Tonight as the Editor. During her career at the BBC, Anne has also worked on more than 100 documentary programs and series on a wide range of topics.
Vincent Duffy has been news director at Michigan Radio since May 2007. In his first year of leading the Michigan Radio news room, the news team won more than three dozen national, regional and state awards including a national Sigma Delta Chi award from the Society of Professional Journalists for a monthlong series investigating education in Michigan. He has worked as a reporter and news director at public radio stations in Illinois and Ohio, and hosted public television programs in Akron, Ohio. Duffy has won five national Edward R. Murrow awards for his radio journalism, as well as a Sigma Delta Chi award, a National Headliner award, many other national, regional and state awards.
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Michigan Radio is a National Public Radio news station and the state’s most listened-to public radio service. Michigan Radio, a service of the University of Michigan, serves Detroit and southeast Michigan at 91.7 FM, West Michigan at 104.1 FM, and the Flint area at 91.1 FM, and is online at www.michiganradio.org. Michigan Radio features
BBC Newshour at 9 a.m. weekdays and BBC World Service from 10 p.m.-5 a.m. weekdays and 10 p.m.-6 a.m. weekends.
The Arab American National Museum documents, preserves, celebrates and educates the public on the history, life, culture and contributions of Arab Americans. It serves as a resource to enhance knowledge and understanding about Arab Americans and their presence in this country. The Arab American National Museum is a project of ACCESS, a Dearborn, Michigan-based nonprofit human services and cultural organization. Learn more at www.arabamericanmuseum.org and www.accesscommunity.org
The Arab American National Museum is a proud Affiliate of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. Read about the Affiliations program at http://affiliations.si.edu
The Museum is located at 13624 Michigan Avenue, Dearborn, MI, 48126. Museum hours: 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday; noon-5 p.m. Sunday. Closed Monday, Tuesday; Thanksgiving, Christmas Day and New Year’s Day. Admission is $6 for adults; $3 for students, seniors and children 6-12; ages 5 and under, free. Call 313.582.2266 for further information.