Wajahat Saeed Khan

Wajahat Saeed Khan (born November 1978), is an Emmy Award-nominated Pakistani multimedia journalist. He has produced and anchored for Pakistan’s major cable networks, as well as reported, written, and edited for local, regional and global publications. Khan has worked as a reporter and producer for NBC News in Islamabad, and as the National Security Correspondent for Dunya News. He has also contributed to The Times and India Today, and is best known as the anchor and editor of the hit primetime show, Mahaaz ("The Front").

Wajahat Saeed Khan
Born
Wajahat Saeed Khan

November 5, 1978
Other namesWSK
Alma materUniversity of Michigan Harvard Kennedy School
Occupation
Websitewww.thebureaureports.com www.wajskhan.wordpress.com

Early life and education

Khan was born in Quetta, Balochistan to a family of civil servants. He attended Karachi Grammar School, where he was selected as the editor of the school magazine, The Grammarian, considered Pakistan's oldest print publication. He went onto the University of Michigan, majoring in Political Science and History, reporting and editing The Michigan Daily. There Khan became the only collegiate journalist to cover the US invasion of Afghanistan after the September 11 attacks. In 2011, the Harvard Kennedy School honoured Khan as the first Pakistani fellow at the Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, Harvard University.[1] At Harvard, Khan authored one of the first studies tracking hate content on Pakistani social media.

Career

Khan's broadcast career started soon after his return from college, when electronic media was deregulated in Pakistan in the early 2000s by the regime of General (retired) Pervez Musharraf. Khan joined the country's largest media house, the Jang Group of Newspapers/Geo News, as Manager of News Product Development and Strategy before switching to news production. He was at Geo News, the country's primary cable news network, from 2003-2007. He then helped launch Dawn News, Pakistan's first English-based news network, in 2007. At Dawn, his broadcast career effectively took off with the interview series "Talk Back"; he also became the first Pakistani to produce an investigative interview series from India for "Talk Back - Eye on India". Khan also produced the first independent documentary series on the Pakistani military, "We Are Soldiers", which was eventually banned by Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority. He remained at Dawn until 2010.

In 2011, Khan was nominated as a Goldsmith Fellow by the Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, Harvard University. The first Pakistani and the youngest fellow at the Shorenstein Center, Khan authored a study about the rise of militancy and hate content on Pakistani social media.[2]

Khan did a short stint for CNN in 2011-12 before moving on to produce and then correspond for NBC News from Islamabad, Kabul, London and Kathmandu.[3]

From 2012 till 2013, Khan pivoted from English broadcast to Urdu, and conducted the series "Ikhtilaf" ["Opposition"], for Karachi-based AAJ TV.[4][5] In 2013, he joined The Jang Group of Newspapers/Geo News again, but in the new capacity of the National Security Editor of Pakistan's largest media house. His writings at The News/Jang focused on the Pakistani military.[6]

In 2015, he was appointed the Executive Vice President and Senior Anchorperson at BOL Network for a few weeks before resigning due to the Axact scandal[7]. He then joined Dunya News as the anchor and editor of the groundbreaking and hit field-based series, Mahaaz.[8]

In 2016, Khan wrote several opinion pieces in US publications such as the Washington Times[9] and The Hill [10]

In July 2018, along with coverage Pakistan's 10th general elections, Khan completed 200 episodes of Mahaaz. For long-form investigative pieces, he also founded The Bureau of Investigative Reporting, a not-for-profit reporting collective which pursues journalism for the public benefit and covers issues usually not covered by the mainstream media in Pakistan.[11]

In summer 2019, Khan published his first book with HarperCollins: "Game Changer - Being Shahid Afridi," a biography of the famous cricketer.[12][13]

References

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