Holly Williams (journalist) explained

Holly Williams
Birth Place:Tasmania, Australia
Education:Australian National University, Deakin University, Harvard University
Employer:CBS News
Occupation:Journalist
Awards:Edward R. Murrow Award, Jack R. Howard Award, Polk Award, Free Expression Award
Children:2

Holly Williams is an Australian foreign correspondent and war correspondent who has worked for CBS since 2012. Prior to that, she worked for BBC News, CNN, and Sky News.

Early life and education

Williams grew up in Tasmania and Victoria, Australia. She attended high school in Victoria. Growing up, she was interested in journalism.[1] Williams became interested in China when she was 12 years old while watching the Tiananmen Square Protests on television. At age 15 she persuaded her parents to let her visit China for three months[1] in an exchange program.[2]

Upon returning home she began studying Chinese in high school.[1] Williams became enamored with learning about and watching Chinese films, including “Farewell My Concubine,” directed by Chen Kaige. Years later as a reporter working in China, she interviewed Kaige.[2]

Williams obtained a bachelor's degree in Chinese language studies and Asian history from the Australian National University.[1] Then she earned a master's degree in international relations from Deakin University. After graduating, Williams became an intern for CNN working in China.

From 2007 to 2008, Williams was a Nieman Fellow at Harvard University.[3]

Career

After her internship, Williams began doing her own camera work, and covered the 2008 Summer Olympics in China. This led to her being hired for her first job as a correspondent[4] and she spent 12 years in China, becoming fluent in Chinese. She worked for BBC News, CNN, and Sky News.

Williams next worked as a war correspondent in conflict areas in Iraq,[3] Yemen,[5] Pakistan, Afghanistan, Gaza, Syria and Libya. She also reported from the conflict area in the Donbass region of Ukraine in the trenches in the line of separation from pro-Russian rebels.[6]

Williams was hired by CBS in October 2012. She then studied Turkish when she was a correspondent in Turkey.

On 21 August 2015, the New York Times included Williams in an article about leading female war correspondents. Elle magazine profiled Williams and several other women in a March 2016 article on female correspondents at CBS.

On 12 March 2017, 60 Minutes broadcast two segments Williams produced centered around a series of interviews she conducted with Mohamedou Slahi. Slahi was one of the few individuals held in Guantanamo that American officials explicitly acknowledge torturing.[7] CBS News described the interviews as Slahi's first television interviews since his repatriation. Williams traveled to Mauritania for those interviews.

In 2022 Williams went back to Ukraine and began filing stories on the Russo-Ukrainian crisis. She visited eastern Ukraine to report on the war zone, where she was accompanied by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.[6]

Journalism awards

Williams received the Edward R. Murrow Award and the Jack R. Howard Award for her war coverage of the terrorist organization ISIS. Williams and colleague Andrew Portch received the 2012 Polk Award for coverage of Chen Guangcheng, a Chinese human rights activist. In 2019 she received the Free Expression Award for courageous acts.[8]

Williams also produced stories that won the Royal Television Society Award, the Foreign Press Association Award and the Golden Nymph.[3]

Personal life

Williams is married and lives with her husband and their daughter and son in Istanbul, Turkey.[8]

Notes and References

  1. [Bob Schieffer]
  2. CBS News: 60 Minutes Overtime (September 18, 2016) (See article below video) "How Holly Williams fell in love with China"
  3. Web site: Holly Williams. CBS News. 31 January 2022. 2018-09-04.
  4. [Bob Schieffer]
  5. Web site: On the frontline with Yemen troops fighting civil war that allows al-Qaeda to thrive. Holly. Williams. 2021-09-08. Yahoo! News. CBS News . en-US.
  6. Web site: From the trenches of Ukraine, a warning about Putin's intentions. Holly. Williams. June 15, 2021. Yahoo! News. CBS News . en-US.
  7. Web site: Williams . Holly . 2017-07-30 . Does torture get good intel? Ex-Gitmo detainee says, "No" - CBS News . 2024-07-17 . www.cbsnews.com . en-US.
  8. CBS News (APRIL 4, 2019) "CBS News' foreign correspondents awarded Free Expression Awards"