Anna Fifield | |
Birth Date: | 1976 3, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Hastings, Hawke's Bay, New Zealand |
Occupation: | Journalist, correspondent |
Employer: | The Washington Post |
Anna Fifield (born 14 March 1976) is the Asia-Pacific editor at The Washington Post. Previously she was the editor of The Dominion Post based in Wellington, New Zealand and the Beijing bureau chief for The Washington Post where she focused her attention on news and issues of Japan, North Korea, and South Korea. She has been to North Korea a dozen times.
Raised in Hastings, Fifield got her start writing for the Rotorua Daily Post and the NZPA wire service.[1] In 2001 at the age of 25 she headed to London and secured a job at the Financial Times, where she worked for 13 years, mainly as a foreign correspondent.
She was US Political Correspondent in Washington, D.C. between 2009 and 2013, and was previously Middle East correspondent in Beirut and Tehran, and Korea Correspondent in Seoul. She was Tokyo bureau chief for The Washington Post from 2014 to 2018, and became the Beijing bureau chief.[2] Fifield has reported from more than 20 countries, including Iran, Iraq, Syria, Libya and North Korea. Over 20 years she covered the first nuclear test by North Korea in 2006, the disputed Iranian presidential election of 2009, and the 2012 US presidential election.
In reporting on North Korea, she highlighted the difficulties faced by ordinary North Koreans, especially in the Kim Jong-un era. In 2017, she interviewed more than 25 recent escapees from North Korea, producing a major report that was published in both English and Korean.[3] This was the first time The Washington Post had published in Korean.[4] She also secured the only interview with Kim Jong-un's aunt, who had been living in the United States since 1998.[5] She wrote about young North Korean escapees making a new life for themselves in South Korea, offering a different narrative from the usual portrayal of North Koreans as helpless victims.[6] Fifield became the first person to ever go live on Facebook from North Korea in 2016.[7] She covered the story of deceased University of Virginia student Otto Warmbier, who was released from imprisonment in North Korea through diplomatic efforts by the Department of State in the Trump Administration.
Interviewing numerous people who have met Kim Jong-un, Fifield has sought to show through reporting that he is not a cartoon villain or a joke, but a ruthless dictator operating strategically, even if that strategy involves killing his own uncle and half-brother in order to stay in power. Fifield's book The Great Successor: The Perfectly Divine Destiny of Brilliant Comrade Kim Jong Un, was published in June 2019, and has since been translated into 24 languages.[8]
She was a Nieman Fellow in Journalism (August 2013 through May 2014) at Harvard University, where she studied how change happens in closed societies.[9] [10] In 2018, she was awarded the Shorenstein Journalism Award from Stanford University for excellence in reporting on Asia. "Fifield exemplifies how crucial it is to get the complexities of Asia right and the profound role of journalism in shaping public and decision maker approaches to our counterparts in the region," the university said.[11]
After covering the coronavirus epidemic, Fifield returned to New Zealand in 2020, and in July became the editor of The Dominion Post and Stuff's Wellington newsroom.[12] She took up her position on 5 October 2020 and left it in December 2022.[13] [14]
In 2022, Fifield announced that she was returning to the Washington Post as its Asia/Pacific correspondent.[15]
-Reprinted in: Los Angeles Times, 16 January 2006, Josh C. H. Lin (El Monte, CA: Pacific Asian Press, 1998), 95–112. in Encyclopedia of Asian American Issues Today, Volume 1, by Edith Wen-Chu Chen.
-Reprinted in: Encyclopedia of Asian American Issues Today, co-edited by Edith Wen-Chu Chen and Grace J. Yoo, 2010. Social Science.