Difference between revisions of "Paul Vallely (UK Journalist)"

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Vallely was the [[The Times]] correspondent in Ethiopia during the famine of 1984/5. He was commended as International Reporter of the Year for his reports which [[Bob Geldof]] described as "vivid, intelligent, moving and brave".  
 
Vallely was the [[The Times]] correspondent in Ethiopia during the famine of 1984/5. He was commended as International Reporter of the Year for his reports which [[Bob Geldof]] described as "vivid, intelligent, moving and brave".  
  
In 2004/5 he was co-author of the report of the [[Commission for Africa]] set up by the British prime minister, Tony Blair, of which Bob Geldof was a member. Vallely was seconded to the Commission for Africa for six months and was the principal author of the report. His account of the Africa Commission process gives no sign that he understands the role of capital, or neoliberalism in Africa. (Paul Vallely ‘Africa Commission had to work out what was wrong and how to fix it’ The Independent, 11 March 2005 http://news.independent.co.uk/world/africa/story.jsp?story=618858)  
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In 2004/5 he was co-author of the report of the [[Commission for Africa]] set up by the British prime minister, Tony Blair, of which Bob Geldof was a member. Vallely was seconded to the Commission for Africa for six months and was the principal author of the report. His account of the Africa Commission process gives no sign that he understands the role of capital, or neoliberalism in Africa.<ref>Paul Vallely, [http://news.independent.co.uk/world/africa/story.jsp?story=618858 Africa Commission had to work out what was wrong and how to fix it], The Independent, 11 March 2005</ref>  
  
 
Vallely ghost-wrote Geldof's autobiography, Is That It? and travelled with Geldof across Africa to decide how to spend the £100m raised by [[Live Aid]] and was involved in the organisation of Live 8.
 
Vallely ghost-wrote Geldof's autobiography, Is That It? and travelled with Geldof across Africa to decide how to spend the £100m raised by [[Live Aid]] and was involved in the organisation of Live 8.
  
==Resources==
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==Contact, References and Resources==
 
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===Contact===
Wikipedia [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Vallely Paul Vallely]
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===Resources===
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*Wikipedia [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Vallely Paul Vallely]
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===References===
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<references/>
  
 
[[Category:British Propaganda|Vallely, Paul]]
 
[[Category:British Propaganda|Vallely, Paul]]
 
[[Category:Journalists|Vallely, Paul]]
 
[[Category:Journalists|Vallely, Paul]]

Latest revision as of 16:16, 14 April 2008

Paul Vallely is a UK journalist who has reported on Africa and development and in 2004/5 worked as a propagandist for the New Labour government of Tony Blair.

Vallely was the The Times correspondent in Ethiopia during the famine of 1984/5. He was commended as International Reporter of the Year for his reports which Bob Geldof described as "vivid, intelligent, moving and brave".

In 2004/5 he was co-author of the report of the Commission for Africa set up by the British prime minister, Tony Blair, of which Bob Geldof was a member. Vallely was seconded to the Commission for Africa for six months and was the principal author of the report. His account of the Africa Commission process gives no sign that he understands the role of capital, or neoliberalism in Africa.[1]

Vallely ghost-wrote Geldof's autobiography, Is That It? and travelled with Geldof across Africa to decide how to spend the £100m raised by Live Aid and was involved in the organisation of Live 8.

Contact, References and Resources

Contact

Resources

References

  1. Paul Vallely, Africa Commission had to work out what was wrong and how to fix it, The Independent, 11 March 2005