Holly Williams Bio, Age, Parents, Husband, Net Worth, Salary, CBS, BBC News

Holly Williams Biography

Holly Williams is an Australian foreign and war correspondent who has been with CBS since 2012. She previously worked for BBC News, CNN, and Sky News.

How old is Holly Williams? – Age

She is 44 years old as of 2022. She was born in 1978 in Tasmania, Australia.

Who are Holly Williams’s Parents? – Education

Williams grew up in the Australian states of Tasmania and Victoria. She went to Victoria High School. She was always interested in journalism as a child. Williams became interested in China when she was 12 years old while watching television coverage of the Tiananmen Square Protests. She persuaded her parents to let her go to China for three months as part of an exchange program when she was 15 years old. When she returned home, she enrolled in high school and began studying Chinese. Williams became obsessed with learning about and watching Chinese films, including Chen Kaige’s “Farewell My Concubine.” Years later, while working as a reporter in China, she interviewed Kaige.

Williams graduated from the Australian National University with a bachelor’s degree in Chinese language studies and Asian history. She then attended Deakin University and earned a master’s degree in international relations. Williams went on to work as an intern for CNN in China after graduating. Williams was a Nieman Fellow at Harvard University from 2007 to 2008.

Who is Holly Williams’s Husband? – Wife

On September 27, 2009, she married fellow musician Chris Coleman. She lives in Istanbul, Turkey, with her husband, daughter, and son.

How much does Holly Williams make?

She earns an annual salary of $ 1140.

Holly Williams Net Worth

She has an estimated net worth of $ 1.6 Million.

Holly Williams Career

Williams, who speaks Mandarin fluently, won the George Polk Award in 2012 for her reporting on Chinese dissident Chen Guangcheng, who escaped house arrest and fled to the US Embassy in Beijing. She was the first reporter to reach his village, where other members of his family were being harassed by Chinese authorities, despite evading government security guards.

In 2015, Williams received the Edward R. Murrow Award for her ongoing coverage of ISIS, as well as the Scripps Howard Foundation’s Jack R. Howard Award for her early reporting on ISIS in Syria and northern Iraq. In the summer of 2014, Williams was one of the first journalists in Iraq to report on the emergence of ISIS in the country’s north.

Holly Williams Photo
Holly Williams Photo

She has continued to report on ISIS throughout the region, including the battle for Tikrit, the discovery of mass graves in western Iraq, and the militants’ advance in Libya. She has also covered Syria’s civil war from within the country, gaining access to a prison where alleged ISIS terrorists were being held and interviewing female Kurdish fighters on the frontlines.

Williams’ international reporting includes the fall of the Russian-backed government in Kiev, the search for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, the Israel-Gaza conflict, the Egyptian uprisings after the military deposed former President Mohammed Morsi, and the Nepal earthquake. She also provided exclusive reporting from Saudi Arabia, where she interviewed women who had been imprisoned for demanding the right to drive.

Williams has made a name for herself as an international investigative journalist. She went undercover inside a Bangladesh factory that exports clothing and other garments to retailers in the United States and Europe in 2013, where she discovered safety and labor violations. She pretended to be an ivory buyer in order to report on the global trafficking of illegal ivory from Africa to China, and she investigated pedophiles’ use of the US government-funded “dark net.”

Williams previously worked as a Beijing-based Asia Correspondent for Sky News, where she covered the Japanese tsunami and nuclear disaster, as well as the release of Burmese Peace Prize Laureate Aung San Suu Kyi from house arrest. She previously worked as a producer for both BBC News and Sky News. She was the author of stories that received the Royal Television Society Award, the Foreign Press Association Award, and the Golden Nymph.