Alan Cowell


Alan S. Cowell is a British journalist and a former foreign correspondent for The New York Times.

Career

Between 2008 and 2013 Cowell was a Senior Correspondent for NYTimes.com based in Paris. In March, 2015, he left the staff of The New York Times but continued as a freelance contributor. He has also written for The Times of London.
Cowell began his journalism career as a reporter for British newspapers: The Lancashire Evening Post and The Cambridge News before becoming a news writer/reader at the Swiss Broadcasting Corporation, in Bern, Switzerland in 1971. He joined Reuters in 1972 as a reporter based in Bonn. and the New York Times in 1981. His reporting has covered primarily the Middle East, Africa and Europe. During a period of time based in Rome, he also covered the Vatican and was a member of the traveling press accompanying Pope John Paul II in Latin America, the United States, Australia and elsewhere. During a 43-year career as a foreign correspondent, Cowell worked from news bureaux in Germany, Turkey, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Kenya, South Africa, Greece, Egypt, Italy, France and the United Kingdom. At Reuters, during the days immediately preceding Zimbabwe's independence, he was the last reporter known to have filed stories by carrier pigeon. In the mid-1980s he was awarded the George Polk Award for coverage of South Africa, whence he was expelled in 1987. He is currently based in London, where he has covered major stories including the killing of Alexander V. Litvinenko, a former K.G.B. officer poisoned with the rare radioactive isotope, Polonium 210, in 2006. His works of fiction have been set in locations including the English Lake District, Paris and South Africa.