Isobel Yeung

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Isobel Yeung
VICE News, until February 2024[1]
PartnerBenjamin Zand (2017–present)[2]

Isobel Yeung (born 1986) is a British long-form documentary senior correspondent. She has covered a variety of stories concerning major global issues such as ongoing world conflicts, terrorism, mass detention, and genocide. She has also reported on social issues in developing countries such as gender roles, women's rights (e.g. in Afghanistan), mental health and corruption.[3][4] Her work has earned her two Emmy Awards and a Gracie Award.

Early and personal life

Yeung was born in 1986 in Salisbury, England, to an English mother and Cantonese father.[5][6] She was raised and spent most of her early life in Salisbury.[citation needed]

After secondary school, Yeung spent a year abroad in Asia, funding her travels through modelling for fashion brands and as editor for lifestyle publications.[7] Yeung graduated the University of Nottingham in 2009, having studied at both the UK and China campuses.[7] Then she moved to China and freelanced for a number of print publications and TV channels, including International Channel Shanghai[8] and China Central Television.[9]

In 2014, Yeung was hired by Vice News and relocated to the United States, settling in New York City.[10] With Vice, she has predominantly been an on-air senior correspondent and producer for their flagship shows airing on HBO, specializing in long-form content and interviews. She is well-known for covering stories on gender discrimination and sexual consent.[11]

Yeung has been dating British-Iranian journalist and director Benjamin Zand since 2017.[2]

Investigative reporting

Reporting in Afghanistan

In 2022, Yeung reported on the state of law and justice in Afghanistan following the 2021 Taliban takeover. Yeung also covered the situation of women's rights under the governance of the Taliban and the ongoing humanitarian crisis in the country stemming from a shortage of food and medical supplies as well as a collapsed economy.[12]

Reporting in China

In 2019, Yeung went undercover in Xinjiang, China, to investigate the internment camps for Uyghurs and other ethnic minorities in the Muslim-majority region, reporting on their mass detention, familial separation, and surveillance at the hands of Chinese authorities. Numerous times during her reporting, Yeung was followed, accosted, and had her camera footage deleted by Chinese police and security forces.[13]

Reporting in Ukraine and Russia

In early 2017, Yeung travelled to Sevastopol on the Crimean Peninsula, forcibly annexed in 2014 by the Russian Federation, to report how the annexation had changed life on the peninsula. Yeung dined at the invitation of Russian oligarch and ex-KGB officer Alexander Lebedev in Sevastopol where he explained his vision for the restoration of the once famous USSR tourist destination. Yeung also interviewed Oleg Zubkov, owner of the Taigan Zoo and Safari Park in Crimea, about the sharp decline in tourism since the annexation and the Ukrainian damming of the North Crimean Canal. Yeung attended a 2018 Ukrainian presidential ceremony featuring President Petro Poroshenko that marked the Ukrainian Orthodox Church's split from the Russian Orthodox Church for the first time in 300 years. During her visit, she interviewed Ukrainian Crimeans who reported nine months of detention and torture by FSB officers for resisting the Russian occupation, the information blackout on the peninsula by Russian authorities, and the opening of the Kerch Strait Bridge.[14]

During the

filtered coverage in Russia and how Ukrainians aren't seeing how "the Nazis torture people [in Ukraine]" and how "the Russian forces are liberating Ukraine from Nazis." Yeung also toured the trenches of the Ukrainian 79th Brigade to the east of the city, attended the funeral of a deceased Ukrainian soldier, and spoke to refugees fleeing the conflict.[15]

In late April and early May 2023, Yeung travelled to Moscow to interview Presidential Commissioner for Children's Rights

unlawful deportation of children from Ukraine to Russia during Russia's invasion of Ukraine. In the interview, Lvova-Belova refuted claims that Russia forcibly deported Ukrainian children and subjected them to propaganda, saying that the children involved and their parents were Russian-speaking and wanted to be part of Russia. She also said that what Russia had done was purely out of compassion for the children and no politics or propaganda was involved, with the Ukrainian children brought into Russia reciprocating with gratitude for Russian soldiers who brought them to safety.[16] The interview was criticized by Mykhailo Podolyak, adviser to the head of Office of the President of Ukraine, who described Lvova-Belova's remarks as "cannibalism" and that Russia is a "perfect model of hell".[17]

Reporting in Yemen

In 2018, Yeung travelled to Aden, Yemen, to report on the situation of the country's women during the Yemeni Civil War. In her Vice News report "The Women Fighting to Protect Yemen", she interviewed female fighters, child brides, domestic abuse victims, widows of the conflict and female protestors, and chewed khat with government officials from the Yemeni Interior Ministry; their takes on the country's problems related to gender discrimination, gender violence and financial displacement of Yemeni women were covered.[18] She also interviewed former child soldiers of the Houthi movement.[19]

Awards and recognition

Yeung received a

Peabody Award for her work in the 2022 short documentary entitled "No Justice for Women in the Taliban's Afghanistan," which investigates life for women in Afghanistan following the United States' 2021 withdrawal from the country.[20] "Yemen: The Forgotten War" and "Return of The Taliban", both for Vice News, won Emmy Awards in the News category in 2022.[21] In 2019, she was presented with the Marie Colvin Front Page Award for Foreign Correspondence.[22] In 2017, Yeung won a Gracie Award for TV National Reporter/Correspondent for her work on Afghan Women’s Rights for Vice on HBO,[23] and in 2016 she was featured in a list of America's 50 Most Influential Women compiled by women's magazine Marie Claire.[11]

References

  1. ^ @IsobelYeung (27 February 2024). "I no longer work for Vice. Its been the greatest honor to work with THE BEST team. We've broken stories from every corner of the globe. Those stories have led to arrests, law & policy changes. We've won all the awards. Moved the needle on important issues.THANKS FOR WATCHING" (Tweet). Archived from the original on 29 February 2024 – via Twitter.
  2. ^ a b "'VICE' Isobel Yeung & The Guy She Might Get Married To; Oh! She's Not Gay". Liverampup.com. 6 January 2019. Archived from the original on 29 February 2024. Retrieved 17 May 2021.
  3. ^ "Isobel Yeung". www.vice.com. Retrieved 20 November 2020.
  4. ^ "On the Front Lines with Isobel Yeung of VICE". Unearth Women. 19 October 2018. Retrieved 20 November 2020.
  5. ^ Jackson, Benjamin (19 April 2017). "VICE's Isobel Yeung is Breaking The Dress Code". The Window. Archived from the original on 8 November 2019. Retrieved 13 August 2021. Originally from the U.K., Yeung has always had a global perspective, due in part to the fact that her father immigrated to England from Hong Kong in search of a better life
  6. ^ Warren, James (23 February 2017). "Vice goes inside Syria to show what media censorship really looks like". Poynter. Retrieved 13 August 2021. The effort by Yeung — the child of an English mother and Hong Kong Chinese dad
  7. ^ a b "Eastday-Isabelle Yeung". english.eastday.com. Retrieved 20 April 2022.
  8. ^ "Getaway Promo". YouTube. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  9. ^ "Isobel Yeung". The Independent. Retrieved 20 April 2022.
  10. ^ Orin, Andy. "We're Gianna Toboni and Isobel Yeung, Correspondents for VICE on HBO, and This Is How We Work". Lifehacker. Retrieved 7 July 2019. In 2014, I pitched a piece for Vice News on the Hong Kong protests. We created a 30-minute documentary, allowing us to dig into some of the issues that weren't being covered in the news headlines.
  11. ^ a b Goldman, Lea; Sklar, Rachel (13 October 2016). "The New Guard: America's 50 Most Influential Women". Marie Claire. Marie Claire. Retrieved 14 November 2019.
  12. YouTube
  13. VICE News
    . Retrieved 7 May 2021.
  14. ^ Yeung, Isobel, Life Inside Putin's Crimea, retrieved 20 April 2022
  15. ^ Yeung, Isobel (27 March 2022), Battle for the South of Ukraine, retrieved 20 April 2022
  16. ^ Yeung, Isobel; Rostowska, Maya; Archen, Ana (2 May 2023), Exclusive: We Interviewed the Russian Woman Accused of 'Stealing' 20,000 Children, Vice News, retrieved 10 May 2023
  17. ^ Roshchina, Olena (2 May 2023), President's Office comments on Vice News interview with Russian Children's Rights Commissioner, Ukrainska Pravda, retrieved 10 May 2023
  18. YouTube
  19. YouTube
  20. ^ "No Justice for Women in the Taliban's Afghanistan". Peabody Awards. 2022.
  21. ^ "Winners of the News categories of the 43rd Annual News and Documentary Emmy Awards" (PDF). Emmy Awards. National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. 28 September 2022. pp. 12, 29. Retrieved 26 September 2023.
  22. ^ "2019 Front Page Awards". NewswomensClubNewYork.com. Newswomen's Club of New York. 23 October 2019. Retrieved 14 November 2019.
  23. ^ "2017 Gracies Gala Winners". All Women in Media. Alliance for Women in Media. 28 March 2017. Retrieved 14 November 2019.