
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Hugh Sykes has reported for the BBC since the 1970s and has travelled far and wide to witness some of the most significant events of our age. Here, in conversation with Owen Bennett-Jones, he discusses what some of those stories mean to him, and explains the journalistic values he applied to them. From the historic British coal miners’ strike of 1984-5 to the insurgency in Iraq, Sykes has faced down danger, surviving respectively an attack by angry strikers who threatened to throw him into a canal, and a roadside bomb. Yet he has always insisted on keeping his own feelings out of the story, in order to let his subjects communicate directly to listeners. Meanwhile, we hear too about his love of Iran, formed by years spent there as a child, about his preference for the medium of radio over television – and about how high spirits in the studio once nearly landed him in trouble with BBC bosses.
Producer: Michael Gallagher
(Image: Hugh Sykes files a report on location – watched by a donkey. Credit: Hugh Sykes’ collection)
By BBC World Service4.3
16071,607 ratings
Hugh Sykes has reported for the BBC since the 1970s and has travelled far and wide to witness some of the most significant events of our age. Here, in conversation with Owen Bennett-Jones, he discusses what some of those stories mean to him, and explains the journalistic values he applied to them. From the historic British coal miners’ strike of 1984-5 to the insurgency in Iraq, Sykes has faced down danger, surviving respectively an attack by angry strikers who threatened to throw him into a canal, and a roadside bomb. Yet he has always insisted on keeping his own feelings out of the story, in order to let his subjects communicate directly to listeners. Meanwhile, we hear too about his love of Iran, formed by years spent there as a child, about his preference for the medium of radio over television – and about how high spirits in the studio once nearly landed him in trouble with BBC bosses.
Producer: Michael Gallagher
(Image: Hugh Sykes files a report on location – watched by a donkey. Credit: Hugh Sykes’ collection)

7,639 Listeners

375 Listeners

1,046 Listeners

5,520 Listeners

964 Listeners

584 Listeners

1,763 Listeners

1,049 Listeners

358 Listeners

583 Listeners

965 Listeners

407 Listeners

410 Listeners

731 Listeners

849 Listeners

366 Listeners

986 Listeners

3,177 Listeners

1,003 Listeners

720 Listeners

1,002 Listeners

386 Listeners