Sophie McNeill explained

Sophie McNeill
Birth Place:Australia
Years Active:2003–present

Sophie McNeill is an Australian journalist,[1] [2] television presenter,[3] author[4] and human rights activist.[5] She is best known for her work reporting from conflict zones.

She was a reporter with the ABC's investigative program Four Corners, a former Middle East Correspondent for ABC News, and has delivered reports from across the region including in Afghanistan, Israel, Iraq, Pakistan, Syria, Yemen, Egypt, Turkey and Gaza.[6] [7] She resigned from the ABC in 2020 to work as a researcher for Human Rights Watch.[8]

Life and career

McNeill began making documentaries in 2001, her first film highlighted the crippling health crisis in a recently-liberated East Timor, for which she received Western Australia's Young Person of the Year Award.[9]

In 2003, McNeill's investigation into the death of an asylum seeker who'd been held under Australia's mandatory detention policy won her the Media, Entertainment and Arts Alliance's Student Journalist of the Year Award, Best Newcomer at the West Australian Media Awards, and Best Emerging Director at the West Australian Screen Awards.

She was also a New York Film Festival finalist for her 2005 story Shoot the Messenger, which detailed the shooting of an unarmed, wounded Iraqi in a Fallujah mosque by an American soldier.

McNeill has worked for ABC's Foreign Correspondent, SBS's Dateline and is a former host of the news and current affairs program Hack on Triple J. She has twice been awarded Australian Young TV Journalist of the Year, and in 2010 won a Walkley award for her investigation into the killing of five children in Afghanistan by Australian special forces soldiers, and was nominated for a Walkley in 2015 for her coverage of the Syrian refugee crisis. In September 2015, her reporting helped reunite a Syrian refugee family that had become separated on the European refugee trail.[10]

In 2019, she received international recognition for her efforts documenting the asylum claim of Rahaf Mohammed.

In March 2020, ABC Books published McNeill's first book, We Can't Say We Didn't Know: Dispatches from an age of impunity.[11] It was shortlisted for the 2020 Walkley Book Award[12] and for the Premier's Prize for an Emerging Writer at the 2020 Western Australian Premier's Book Awards.[13]

In 2020, McNeill joined Greenpeace as a senior campaigner.[14]

In 2024, McNeill nominated to be a candidate on The Greens upper house ticket in the 2025 Western Australian state election.[15]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sophie McNeill's Biography Muck Rack. muckrack.com. en. 2019-12-24.
  2. Web site: Sophie McNeill. Dateline. en. 2019-12-24.
  3. Web site: Sophie McNeill. IMDb. 2019-12-24.
  4. Web site: Sophie McNeill. HarperCollins Publishers: World-Leading Book Publisher. en-US. 2019-12-24.
  5. Web site: Sophie McNeill . Human Rights Watch . 26 January 2021.
  6. Web site: Sophie McNeill. 2013-02-13. ABC News. en. 2019-12-24.
  7. Web site: How Four Corners journalist Sophie McNeill revealed the plight of Saudi teen Rahaf Al Qunun. McNeill. Sophie. 2019-02-04. ABC News. en-AU. 2019-12-24.
  8. News: Meade . Amanda . Emma Alberici and ABC finalise details of their long and messy divorce . 26 January 2021 . The Guardian . 21 August 2020.
  9. Web site: 2009-10-03 . Award-winning Journalist to deliver Lancaster University Peace Lecture . 2024-03-24 . Virtual Lancaster . en-US.
  10. Web site: Sophie McNeill . ABC News . 26 January 2021.
  11. Book: McNeill, Sophie. We can't say we didn't know. 978-0-7333-4015-4. Sydney, N.S.W.. 1127559982.
  12. Web site: Walkley Book Award. 2020-11-05. The Walkley Foundation.
  13. Web site: 2021-06-18. WA Premier's Book Awards shortlists announced. 2021-07-26. Books+Publishing. en-AU.
  14. Web site: Sophie McNeill . 2024-03-24 . Conservation Council of Western Australia . en.
  15. Web site: Dietsch . Jake . 2024-01-22 . Former journo nominates for Greens post new pro-women rule . 2024-03-24 . The West Australian . en.