Ghada Karam Owais | |
---|---|
غادة كرم عويس | |
Born | |
Alma mater | Lebanese University |
Occupation | Journalist |
Ghada Karam Owais, [a] also spelled Ghada Oueiss, is a Lebanese journalist for Al Jazeera. She was born on November 6, 1977, and attended the Lebanese University, graduating in 1999. [1] Owais joined Al Jazeera in 2006. [2] She speaks Arabic and English. [3]
Owais was born in Beirut to a Maronite Christian family. She holds a Bachelor’s degree in Mass Communication from the Lebanese University, majoring in Radio and Television in 1999. She worked as an anchor and field correspondent for the Lebanese ANB channel from 2004 to 2006. She received a training course with the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) in London in 2004 and a training course with the BBC in Beirut in 2005. She had previously worked as a broadcaster and field reporter for Al-Jadeed TV for a year. From 2001 to 2004, she was a journalist and correspondent for Al-Afkar magazine from 2000 to 2001, in addition to preparing and presenting programs for Voice of Lebanon Radio for the period from 1999-2000. [4]
Owais joined Al-Jazeera as a news anchor on April 26, 2006. She is noted for her special coverage of several high profile news stories, including:
Owais has been the target of several harassment, intimidation, and disinformation campaigns by state-sponsored actors due to her reporting, politics, gender, and her Christian faith. In 2020, images from her private smartphone were stolen in a spyware attack by foreign agents. The images were doctored to sexualize them, and disseminated to accuse her of promiscuity and prostitution. In December 2020, Owais sought legal action in a US court against a number of key international political actors, including both the crown prince of Saudi Arabia and of the United Arab Emirates for allegedly coordinating the disinformation and harassment campaigns against her. [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11]
In 2013, Owais received the May Chidiac Foundation Award for “Engaged Journalism”. In 2023, Owais weas honored as a ‘World Woman Hero’ by the World Woman Foundation in Davos, for demonstrating "the personal courage and professional commitment it takes to be a leading female TV journalist in the traditionally male-dominated Middle East".