Syed Neaz Ahmad Explained

Syed Neaz Ahmad
Native Name:সৈয়দ নিয়াজ আহমেদ
Native Name Lang:bn
Birth Date:1950s
Birth Place:Dhaka, East Bengal (now Bangladesh)
Nationality:British
Alma Mater:University of Dhaka (BA)
University of London (MA)
Occupation:Academic, writer, journalist
Years Active:1975–present
Chief Executive of Media World
Spouse:Rina Musharraf
Children:4

Syed Neaz Ahmad (Bengali: সৈয়দ নিয়াজ আহমেদ) is a Bangladeshi-born British academic, writer, journalist, and critic based in London. He is best known for anchoring NTV Europe current affairs talk show Talking Point.

Education

Ahmad obtained a first class BA (Honours) and a first class MA from Dhaka University during the Bangladesh freedom movement. Later he graduated with an MA in comparative linguistics from the University of London to pursue higher studies and research. His main area of research and interest is comparative linguistics in Arabic and English.[1] [2]

Career

From September 1975 until June 2008, Ahmad was senior lecturer at Umm al-Qura University and taught English language, creative writing and applied linguistics.[3]

While at Umm al-Qura University, he authored a series of three textbooks on writing for students of engineering and Islamic architecture[3] which are used at Middle East universities.[1] [2] His research has featured in many textbooks. He contributed articles, features, book reviews and weekly columns to Jeddah-based daily newspapers: Saudi Gazette and Arab News. His weekly column, Viewpoint was published for 25 years, a record in the Middle East. He was also editor of Saudi Gazette for five years.[1] [2] He has also appeared on Saudi television chat shows and was often interviewed on Jeddah FM radio. After leaving his job at the Umm al-Qura University, Ahmad was editorial consultant for Saudi NGO Muslim World League's[3] English Journal.[1] [2]

Ahmad writes for The Guardian on Muslim and Middle East issues. He has also been published in the USA Today, Asian Tribune, BusinessWeek, BioScience Encyclopedia, UNHCR reports published by the United Nations, the Virginia-based Institute on Religion and Public Policy publications. He currently writes editorial articles for the Dhaka Daily, New Age and Jeddah newspaper, Arab News. His articles are carried by websites worldwide including Middle East Online, Newspeg.com, Journalisted.com, World Political Report, Medarabnews and US National Public Radio. His articles have been translated into Arabic, Bulgarian, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Indonesian, Bengali, Hindi and Japanese.[1] [2]

Ahmad presents Talking Point, a current affairs talk show which airs every Tuesday at 8 pm on NTV Europe.[4] He has interviewed several prime ministers, ministers, MPs, Oscar winners, Nobel laureates and has edited academic journals. He has given over 50 talks on BBC World Service Radio on topics related to Islamic rituals, practices and education and social norms. During his stay in Saudi Arabia he was often a guest on Saudi television talk shows and Jeddah FM Radio.[1] [2]

Since January 2000, Ahmad has been a chief executive of a resource and research organisation, Media World. He is currently working on his memoir, Saudi Arabia: A Holy Country That Was.[1] [2] Syed Neaz Ahmad was awarded Fellowship of the Royal Society of Arts FRSA in May 2019.[5]

Personal life

Ahmad lives in London with his wife, Rina Musharraf, and four children, Faisal, Talal, Tania and Anzar.[1] [2]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Karim. Mohammed Abdul. Karim. Shahadoth. British Bangladeshi Who's Who. October 2010. British Bangla Media Group. 11. 1 August 2014.
  2. Book: Karim. Mohammed Abdul. Karim. Shahadoth. British Bangladeshi Who's Who. October 2011. British Bangla Media Group. 13. 1 August 2014.
  3. News: Ahmad. Syed Neaz. Eleven days in Saudi Gitmo. The Guardian. 14 July 2009. 1 July 2015.
  4. Web site: Talking Point. NTV Europe. 1 August 2014.
  5. Web site: The power of RSA Fellowship networks to change the world - RSA . thersa.org.