Mark Doyle Bio, Age, Family, Wife, School, Salary, Net Worth,

Mark Doyle the BBC journalist

Mark Doyle Biography

Mark Doyle is a British journalist and former BBC News international affairs correspondent. He is particularly well-known for his essays on African issues.


How old is Mark Doyle? – Age

Doyle was born on 29 May 1963 in Melbourne, Australia. He is 58 years as of 2021.

Where did Mark Doyle go to school? – Education

He studied at Xavier College.

Doyle Wife – Family

Doyle has a sibling, David Doyle.

Doyle’s wife

Mark Doyle is possibly single and has never been married, according to our data. Mark Doyle is not dating anyone as of June 2021.

Mark Doyle the BBC journalist
Mark Doyle the BBC journalist

What is Doyle’s Salary?

His salary is under review.

Doyle Net Worth

Mark Doyle’s net worth is estimated to be $1.5 million.

Doyle Career

Doyle worked as a volunteer student teacher at the British-Senegalese Institute in Dakar, Senegal, in 1980. He then worked for Amnesty International and West Africa, a London-based magazine, before joining the BBC in 1986 as a producer for the Focus on Africa show. He continued to report from many African nations, eventually becoming the East Africa reporter from 1993 to 1994.  He is well-known for his reportage after arriving in Kigali at the start of the Rwandan genocide in 1994. Doyle was one of the few journalists to enter Kigali before the airport closed, and he was the sole journalist to report constantly during the genocide.

Other projects include co-editing coverage of the 1996 US presidential election and teaching Eastern European journalists in Moldova. He has worked as a correspondent for the BBC’s domestic service as well as the BBC World Service radio and television, and he was named the BBC’s West Africa correspondent in 1997. Doyle and his producer Dan McMillan earned a United Nations Correspondents Association / UN Foundation UNCA Excellence in Journalism Award in the category “Reporting on Humanitarian and Developmental Affairs” in 2004. The prize was presented for coverage of post-war Liberia as part of the United Nations peacekeeping force. Doyle was working on a book on his experiences in Africa at the time, titled Under the Same Sky: Good Guys and Bad Guys in Africa’s Failed States. Doyle departed the BBC in March 2015.