Nelufar Hedayat | |
Birth Date: | 1 January 1988 |
Birth Place: | Kabul, Afghanistan |
Alma Mater: | University of Westminster |
Occupation: | Journalist, correspondent, presenter |
Nationality: | British |
Years Active: | 2010–present |
Nelufar Hedayat (born 1 January 1988) is a British journalist and presenter who hosts the podcast Course Correction[1] and is the correspondent for Doha Debates.[2] She has worked in television across the BBC, as well as on Channel 4, Netflix, Fusion and The Guardian newspaper, covering breaking news, live events and in-depth investigations in some of the world's most dangerous places. Her work often focuses on cultural upheaval experienced by women, children, and families during a conflict, especially in her native Afghanistan.
Born in Kabul, Afghanistan,[3] in 1988, Hedayat came to the United Kingdom from her war-torn homeland.[4] Her mother, who was a civil engineer, took a job cleaning hotel rooms, and her father, a professor of mathematics, worked as a carpet salesman.[5] Hedayat has said: "Growing up in North London, identity was never really a big issue. I always felt I was free to be who I wanted to be, surrounded by a world where difference and eccentricity were the norm." She graduated from the University of Westminster with a BA Honours degree in English Literature.[6]
Hedayat joined BBC Three in 2009 and left in 2011 for BBC Newsround. In 2014 she left the BBC and worked as a general reporter for Channel 4 News. In 2015–16, she worked on the documentary series The Traffickers for Lightbox Media.[7] [8] [9] She joined the Fusion Media investigative team in late 2016 as a full-time Fusion Host until 2018 Fusion host.[10]
In 2017 she was named Manchester Metropolitan University and Routes into Languages North West Journalist of the Year.[11]
The 2010 television documentary Women, Weddings, War and Me, directed by Ruhi Hamid,[12] follows Hedayat as she returns to her homeland for the first time since leaving some 15 years earlier. She returned to Afghanistan to discover how the lives of women in Afghanistan had changed with the fall of the Taliban. She later said "I met with women who had been so defeated by a patriarchal society, they thought of themselves as second-class citizens. I found a world of extreme violence against them, where they were traded like animals – not treated as human beings. Girls were in prison for trying to escape abusive marriages. I cried with these women, tried to understand them and to comfort them. ...I came back to the UK knowing that I had changed. I was humbled by my experience, but there was an ever stronger feeling of thankfulness to my mother, who had saved me from such suffering."[13]
The documentary was shown on BBC Three from 2 March 2010. It also aired in Australia on ABC on 17 May 2010 and it has received largely positive reviews,[14] while scoring the highest audience approval rating for a documentary on any channel ever reported.[15] The documentary has gone on to win the Broadcast Digital Award for Best Current Affairs' Programme.[16]
In this BBC Three documentary aired in 2011, Hedayat explores the world of hip-hop music video girls. She meets young women in the UK seeking careers as hip-hop models both in the UK and the US, but falling victim to financial and sexual exploitation.[17]
In her 2014 début for Channel 4's Unreported World series, Hedayat went to uncover the secret world of the dog meat trade in Vietnam. Millions of dogs are killed every year to satisfy the demand for the meat. Often pets are stolen from homes because the demand is so high and police officers can do little but fine the thieves.[18] Hedayat finds trucks crammed full of hundreds of dogs hungry and vomiting after being force-fed rice on the way to Hanoi's dog meat only restaurants and meets the village that murdered the thieves plaguing them. Hedayat worked on the film with director Daniel Bogado.[19]
In her first eight-part documentary series, Hedayat investigates traffickers and illicit markets around the world, uncovering vast criminal networks enabled by middle men and corruption. For her work on the series, she won the 2017 Reporter/Correspondent Gracie Award (presented by the Alliance for Women in Media),[20] and was named Journalist of the Year at the Asian Media Awards.[21] [22]
This five-part docuseries follows Nelufar across the globe, discovering how emerging technological advances will affect daily life in the future.
Year | Title | Role | |
---|---|---|---|
2010 | Women, Weddings, War and Me, BBC Three | Presenter | |
2011 | Music, Money and Hip Hop Honeys, BBC Three | Presenter | |
2011 | The Truth about Child Brides, BBC Three | Presenter | |
2010-14 | Newsround, CBBC | Presenter and Reporter | |
2012 | Riots and Revolutions: My Arab Journey Part One, Egypt and Bahrain, BBC Three | Presenter | |
2012 | Riots and Revolutions: My Arab Journey Part Two, Libya and Lebanon, BBC Three | Presenter | |
2013 | Shot For Going To School, BBC Three | Presenter and Associate Producer | |
2014 | Vietnam's Dog Snatchers, Unreported World, Channel 4 | Reporter | |
2014 | Channel 4 News, Channel 4 | Reporter | |
2015 | Vaccination Wars, Channel 4 | Reporter | |
2016 | The Traffickers, Fusion Media Network | Investigative Correspondent | |
2018 | Food Exposed With Nelufar Hedayat, Fremantle Media | Investigative Correspondent | |
2018 | India's Love Cheat Detectives, Unreported World, Channel 4 | Reporter | |
2019 | Story of God Season 4, National Geographic | Seeker | |
2020 | Toxic Mafia, Vice Criminal Planet/Channel 4 | Host | |
2022 | Flash Forward, Rakuten | Presenter | |
2022 | The God Thieves, Newsy In Real Life | Host and co-Producer | |
2022 | Plastic Time Bomb, Newsy In Real Life | Host, co-Director and co-Producer | |
2023 | Safety vs Freedom in El Salvador: The Dark Side of 'State of Exception' Mass Arrests, Newsy In Real Life | Host |