Yousra Elbagir

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Bornc. 1992 Edit this on Wikidata
Almamater
OccupationJournalist Edit this on Wikidata
Awards
  • OkayAfrica 100 Women (2017) Edit this on Wikidata
Yousra Elbagir
يسرا الباقر Edit this on Wikidata
Bornc. 1992 Edit this on Wikidata
Alma mater
OccupationJournalist Edit this on Wikidata
Awards
  • OkayAfrica 100 Women (2017) Edit this on Wikidata

Yousra Elbagir is a Sudanese–British journalist and writer. She is the Africa correspondent for UK news broadcaster Sky News.[1][2][3][4]

Elbagir was born in Khartoum to a Sudanese journalist and politician father, and to a publisher and business person mother. Her mother is known to be the first female publisher in Sudan. She grew up in the United Kingdom until she was 8 years old, when her family moved to Sudan. She moved back to London at the age of 16 and there, she acquired her A levels and graduated from the University of St Andrews with honours after studying Social Anthropology.[5][6][7]

Journalism

Elbagir started her journalistic experience by participating in student publications during her studies at St Andrews.[8]

Elbagir returned to Sudan in 2015 after her studies to train as a journalist in the field for a year and half.[4][7] As of 2016, she was working as a freelance reporter in Khartoum and was a producer for Elephant Media.[2] Her works have been featured on HBO, Channel 4, BBC Africa, BBC Radio 4, CNN, The Financial Times and The Guardian.[9][10][11][12][13]

Elbagir is well known for having launched the #SudanUnderSanction online media campaign in which Sudanese women and men discussed the effects of the trade sanctions against Sudan.[14]

In 2019, Elbagir reported on the Sudanese Revolution while working for Channel 4. She criticised the beginning steps of the Sudanese institutional transition to democracy, stating, "For the [first] tangible political progress of decades to exclude women is ridiculous. ... Women were the reason that the mass pro-democracy sit-in was able to continue for nearly two months. They ran make-shift clinics, fed fasting protesters daily during Ramadan, they spent the night at check points searching female protesters."[15]

In 2022,[16] Elbagir joined Sky News as its Africa correspondent.[1]

Personal life

Awards

References

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