Sneha Girap (Editor)

Rageh Omaar

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Native name
  
راجح عمر

Name
  
Rageh Omaar

Alma mater
  
Role
  
Journalist


Occupation
  
Journalist, author

Parents
  
Abdullahi Omaar

Religion
  
Sunni Islam

Siblings
  
Mohamed Abdullahi Omaar

Rageh Omaar newsimagesitvcomauthorprofileimage31fulls


Born
  
19 July 1967 (age 56) (
1967-07-19
)
Mogadishu, Somalia

Spouse
  
Georgiana Rose Montgomery-Cuninghame (m. 2000)

Books
  
Only Half of Me, Revolution Day, The Miracles of Jesus, Revolution Day Showcard

Children
  
Zachary Omaar, Sami Omaar, Loula Omaar

Education
  
New College, Oxford, University of Oxford

Profiles

Rageh Omaar on The One World Media Awards


Rageh Omaar (; Somali: Raage Oomaar, Arabic: راجه اومار‎‎‎; born 19 July 1967) is a Somali-born British journalist and writer. He was a BBC world affairs correspondent, where he made his name reporting from Iraq. In September 2006, he moved to a new post at Al Jazeera English, where he presented the nightly weekday documentary series Witness until January 2010. The Rageh Omaar Report, first aired February 2010, is a one-hour, monthly investigative documentary in which he reports on international current affairs stories. From January 2013, he became a special correspondent and presenter for ITV News, reporting on a broad range of news stories, as well as producing special in-depth reports from all around the UK and further afield. A year after his appointment, Omaar was promoted to International Affairs Editor for ITV News. Since October 2015, alongside his duties as International Affairs Editor, he has been a Deputy Newscaster of ITV News at Ten. Since September 2017 Ommar has occasionally presented the ITV Lunchtime News including the ITV News London Lunchtime Bulletin and the ITV Evening News.

Contents

Rageh Omaar Rageh Omaar joins ITV News Media The Guardian

Rageh omaar interview wmv


Early life

Rageh Omaar Rageh Omaar 39Idealism has become a dirty word among many

Omaar was born in 1967 in Hargeisa the capital of Somaliland, into a Habr Awal Isaaq family. He is the son of a wealthy businessman from the northwestern Somaliland region of Somalia. A Muslim, his family is originally from Hargeisa.

Rageh Omaar Conman who tried to steal from BBC39s Rageh Omaar gets

Omaar moved to the United Kingdom at the age of two. He has several siblings: his elder brother, Mohamed Abdullahi Omaar, was a former Foreign Minister of Somalia.

Education

Rageh Omaar Biyokulule Online

Omaar attended two independent schools, the Dragon School in Oxford and Cheltenham College in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire. He later studied Modern History at New College at the University of Oxford.

General

Rageh Omaar BBC Press Office Rageh Omaar to present The Life Of Muhammad for

Omaar began his journalistic career as a trainee for The Voice newspaper. In 1991, he moved to Ethiopia where he freelanced as a foreign correspondent, working mainly for the BBC World Service. A year later, Omaar returned to London to work as a producer and broadcast journalist for the BBC. He moved to South Africa after having been appointed the BBC's Africa correspondent. Omaar's wife and children were based there through 2004, and his regular commuting made domestic life a challenge.

His career highlights include reporting live on the conflicts in Somalia and Iraq.

BBC

Omaar covered the Iraq invasion for the weekday BBC news bulletins and BBC News. Many of his broadcasts were syndicated across the United States, where he became known as the Scud Stud.

Omaar has written a book about his time as the BBC's Iraq correspondent called Revolution Day. The book deals with the effects of the Saddam Hussein regime, UN sanctions, and of the war on Iraqi civilians.

Explaining why he eventually left the BBC, Omaar suggested that he wanted to operate independently and to take on assignments for people he wished to collaborate with. He also suggested that the BBC working environment was somewhat exclusivist on a class basis, and that he was guilty of this as well to some degree as a consequence of his public school upbringing.

Additionally, Omaar has expressed regret about the way in which he covered the invasion of Iraq during his time as a BBC correspondent. He suggested that he and his colleagues did pieces on Sadam Hussein, his regime and weapons inspectors, giving little coverage to the Iraqi people. Interviewed in John Pilger's documentary The War You Don't See (2010), Omaar also lamented that "one didn't press the most uncomfortable buttons hard enough" and called the coverage "a giant echo chamber".

Al Jazeera

In September 2006, Omaar joined Al Jazeera English. He served as a Middle Eastern correspondent for its London Division.

During his time with the news organization, Omaar presented the nightly weekday documentary series Witness. He also hosted the monthly The Rageh Omaar Report, his own investigative documentaries.

ITV News

In January 2013, it was announced that Omaar would be joining ITV News as a special correspondent. He was promoted the following year to ITV News' International Affairs Editor.

Since October 2015, alongside his duties as International Affairs Editor, Rageh has been a Deputy Newscaster of ITV News at Ten.

Since September 2017 Ommar has occasionally presented the ITV Lunchtime News including the ITV News London Lunchtime Bulletin and the ITV Evening News.

Awards and nominations

In 2003, Omaar was the recipient of an Ethnic Multicultural Media Academy award for the best TV journalist.

In 2008, he was also presented the Arab Media Watch Award for excellence in journalism.

In January 2014 and 2015, Omaar was nominated for the Services to Media award at the British Muslim Awards.

Personal life

Omaar is married to Georgiana Rose "Nina" Montgomery-Cuninghame, the daughter of Sir John Montgomery-Cuninghame of Corsehill. The couple live in Chiswick, west London, with their three children.

He maintains close contact with his family in Somalia, is an activist for the Somali community, and regularly attends its lectures and events.

Television

  • Race and Intelligence: Science's last taboo. TV documentary for Channel 4 : October 2009.
  • Pakistan's War. TV documentary for Al Jazeera English (Mid-Winter Production 2008/09)
  • Iran Season, TV documentary for Al Jazeera English : January 2009
  • Islam in America, TV documentary for Al Jazeera English : October 2008
  • An Islamic History of Europe, TV documentary for BBC Four : August 2005
  • The Miracles of Jesus, TV documentary for BBC One : beginning on 6 August 2006
  • Rageh Inside Iran, TV documentary for BBC Four
  • The Dead Sea Scrolls. TV documentary BBC Four
  • Immigration: The Inconvenient Truth, a three part Channel 4 Dispatches documentary, on how immigration has affected Britain, using Enoch Powell's 1968 Rivers of Blood speech as a starting point (7 to 21 April 2008)
  • The Vicar of Baghdad, TV documentary ITV1
  • The Life of Muhammad. TV documentary for BBC 2. This is a three-part series, which had its first showing on 11 July 2011 on BBC Two from 9 p.m. to 10 p.m. The final edition of the series was on 25 July,on BBC 2 9 -10 pm. People on the programme included Karen Armstrong.
  • Panorama - Ivory Wars: Out of Africa, TV current affairs documentary BBC1 : 12 April 2012
  • The Ottomans: Europe's Muslim Emperors, BBC2, September 2013
  • Books

  • Revolution Day: The Real Story of the Battle for Iraq, Penguin Books (2005), ISBN 0-14-101716-3
  • Only Half of Me: Being a Muslim in Britain, Viking (2006), ISBN 0-670-91509-2
  • DVD

  • The Ottomans: Europe's Muslim Emperors (region 2)
  • References

    Rageh Omaar Wikipedia