Professor Peter Greste is an award-winning foreign correspondent who spent 25 years working for the BBC, Reuters and Al Jazeera in some of the world’s most volatile places. From Afghanistan to Latin American, Africa and the Middle East, he reported from the frontlines and beyond, although he is best known for becoming a headline himself, when he and two of his colleagues were arrested in Cairo while working for Al Jazeera and charged with terrorism offences. He has since become a vocal campaigner and advocate for media freedom – a stance that has earned him awards from Britain’s Royal Television Society, the Walkley Foundation, the RSL’s ANZAC Peace Prize, the Australian Human Rights Commission’s Human Rights Medal, and the International Association of Press Clubs’ Freedom of Speech Award. Peter is the Executive Director of the Alliance for Journalists’ Freedom.
Saturday 18 October
2.45pm
Imprisoned for his journalism, Peter Greste has traversed the globe and reported from the world’s most dangerous places. Depicted by Richard Roxburgh in a film based on his bestselling memoir, Greste will reflect on why telling the truth has become so dangerous, and how good journalism is essential in a fractured world. With Michael Cathcart.
Presented in partnership with the Peter Blazey Fellowship.
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