Mark Stone (journalist)

Mark Stone (born 29 January 1979) is the Middle East correspondent of Sky News. He was previously the network’s Europe Correspondent (2015-19) and Asia Correspondent (2012-15).[1]

Mark Stone
Born (1979-01-29) 29 January 1979
EducationHawtreys
Cheltenham College
Alma materUniversity of East Anglia (BA.)
OccupationSky News Middle East correspondent
Children3

Early life

Stone was educated in the United Kingdom, first at Hawtreys School in Wiltshire, then at Cheltenham College, followed by the University of East Anglia (BA, 2001). His brother is Lt-Col. Guy Stone, Welsh Guards who is currently (2019-20) Brigade Major, Household Division, responsible for all ceremonial on State Visits to the UK by foreign heads of state.[2]

Life and career

Stone joined the London Bureau of ABC News, the news division of the American Broadcasting Company, in 2002, as a producer.

Between 2003-04, he spent nearly a year living in Baghdad, Iraq where he reported on the capture of Saddam Hussein and the growing insurgency in Iraq. He was part of a team which won an Emmy for their coverage.

Stone joined Sky News in 2005 working first as a producer before switching to reporting in 2007. In 2012 he became the network's Asia Correspondent, based in Beijing, China. In 2015 he moved to Brussels, Belgium as the network's Europe Correspondent.

Stone has reported from a wide number of locations in the UK and around the world, from the ongoing conflicts in Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya to the 2011 riots in London.

He was one of the first British journalists to ‘embed’ with the British Army in Afghanistan's Helmand Province in July 2006. He met the former KGB spy, Alexander Litvinenko in London, two weeks before he was poisoned. He covered Mr. Litvinenko's death and its wider implications in detail.

In 2011, he spent 6 weeks reporting extensively from Libya on the uprising against Muammar Gaddafi, the NATO intervention and the subsequent death of Muammar Gaddafi.

He is one of a small number of journalists to have attended almost every session of Britain's Iraq Inquiry giving him an extensive knowledge of the war in Iraq and the decisions behind it.

In August 2011, Stone played a widely reported and important role in Sky News coverage of the London riots. In one of the first examples of the use of mobile devices for newsgathering, Stone used just an iPhone, rather than relying upon the usual accompaniment of a professional television crew, to record and broadcast scenes of arson and his own confrontation with looters, which both led Sky News bulletins and were covered widely by broadcasters around the world. Online, within 24 hours, his videos had been viewed by nearly a million people. He was nominated and shortlisted for an award by the Royal Television Society for his innovative coverage of the riots, and was praised in the media for his handling of the news coverage.[3][4]

In March 2013, Stone and his cameraman were detained in Beijing's Tiananmen Square. They had been filming a report about the 1989 protests and were then detained after being accused of not having the right accreditation. They broadcast live from a police van as it drove them away for questioning. They were released after several hours of interrogation.

In July 2013, Stone travelled to North Korea as part of a select group of journalists granted access to the reclusive country. He and his Sky News team produced the first ever live international broadcasts from events at locations around the capital Pyongyang, allowing viewers a real-time glimpse inside North Korea.

Stone was a key part of Sky's extensive coverage of the disappearance of Malaysia Airline Flight MH370 in 2014.

He provided extensive coverage of Europe's migration crisis between 2015 and 2017.

Since 2017 his main focus has been on Brexit from Sky News's Europe Bureau in Brussels.

In May 2019 Sky announced that Stone will become the network's Middle East Correspondent.

In November 2020, during the United States presidential election, Stone attended the Four Seasons Total Landscaping press conference where he informed Rudy Giuliani that all of the American networks had called the race for Joe Biden.[5][6]

Awards

Mark's work across Asia was recognised by the Royal Television Society in 2014 when he was shortlisted for RTS Journalist of the Year alongside Bill Neely and Jeremy Bowen. His work in Burma, North Korea and China has also been recognised by the OneWorld Media Awards. In 2011, he was nominated and shortlisted for an award by the Royal Television Society for his innovative use of mobile journalism in his coverage of the London riots. In 2004, working for ABC News, Mark and his team were awarded an Emmy for their coverage of the Iraq War.

Family

Stone is married with three children.

References

  1. Looks a bit of a ....Mark Stone Archived 18 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine Publisher: Sky News Press Office. Retrieved: 23 December 2012.
  2. Sky News, 3 June 2019, 12:20 pm, commentary on State Visit by President Trump; corrected to Welsh Guards, not Blues & Royals
  3. Mark Stone Asia Correspondent Archived 20 January 2013 at the Wayback Machine Publisher: Sky News. Retrieved: 23 December 2012.
  4. Mark Stone Publisher: Journalisted.com. Retrieved: 23 December 2012.
  5. Stone, Mark (9 November 2020). "US election result: Pennsylvania - the state which reflects a divided America". Sky News. Retrieved 25 November 2020. As he spoke, news came in that the American networks had called the election for Joe Biden. Mr Giuliani was asked for his reaction. "Which networks!?" he asked. "All of them," I replied.
  6. Mark Stone [@Stone_SkyNews] (7 November 2020). "@RudyGiuliani provided a handful of witnesses to 'mass electoral fraud'... and I had a brief exchange with him..." (Tweet). Retrieved 25 November 2020 via Twitter.
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