Waleed Aly Biography
Waleed Aly is a journalist, lecturer, and lawyer from Australia. Aly is a political science lecturer at Monash University, where she works in the Global Terrorism Research Centre, and a co-host of Network Ten’s news and current affairs show The Project.
How old is Waleed Aly? – Age
He is 44 years old as of 15 August 2022. He was born in 1978 in Melbourne, Australia.
Waleed Aly Family – Education
Aly was born in Egypt to Egyptian parents. He practices Sunni Islam. He went to Wesley College and earned his International Baccalaureate in 1996. He then attended the University of Melbourne, where he earned a Bachelor of Engineering (Chemical) and a Bachelor of Laws (with honours) in 2002.
Waleed Aly Wife
Aly resides in Melbourne with her husband, Australian feminist author and professor Susan Carland, and their two daughters. Carland converted to Islam when he was 19 years old and has a PhD from Monash University.
How tall is Waleed Aly?
He stands at a height of 6 feet 1.5 inches (1.87 m)
What is Waleed Aly’s salary? – Net Worth
He is said to be earning $900,000 per year. He has an estimated net worth of $8 Million.
Waleed Aly The Project
He was a regular panelist and producer on Salam Cafe, a weekly program presented by young members of Melbourne’s Muslim community and produced by RMITV for C31 Melbourne and later for SBS. He has been a panelist on ABC TV’s Q&A program and an occasional co-host on ABC’s News Breakfast.
Aly quit as ABC Radio National (RN) Drive anchor in December 2014 to become the permanent co-host of Channel Ten’s The Project, beginning on January 26, 2015. In April 2015, he returned to ABC RN to co-host The Minefield, in addition to his job on Channel Ten’s The Project. In the aftermath of the November 2015 Paris attacks, Aly criticized the extremist group Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant in a four-minute monologue titled “What ISIL wants” on The Project, labeling them “bastards” and urging no one to fear them because “they are weak.” Aly and producer Tom Whitty wrote the video, which was put online and earned 13 million views in a single day.
Aly continues to co-host The Minefield with religion and ethics pundit Scott Stephens and an expert studio guest each week as of 2021, as well as his involvement on The Project.
Waleed Aly Career
Aly worked as an associate for Family Court judge Joseph Kay after graduating, and until 2007, she worked as a solicitor for Maddocks Lawyers in Melbourne. On secondment from Maddocks, he worked as a pro bono attorney for the Human Rights Law Centre in 2006.
Aly released People Like Us: in 2007. How self-importance is partitioning Islam and the West. In 2008, he was chosen to partake in the Australia 2020 Culmination, a bipartisan show held in Canberra to “assist with molding a drawn out system for the country’s future”.
The Global Terrorism Research Centre at Monash University employs Aly. He has stated that the arbitrary division of the Middle East’s territories by Western powers, the ongoing demand for Middle Eastern oil, and more recently events like the 2003 invasion of Iraq are to blame for the majority of the conflicts there. After the Boston Long distance race bombarding, depicting psychological oppression as a “unending aggravation”, he said it is empowering that we are at last developing in the manner we handle illegal intimidation. During his experience as head of public issues for the Islamic Chamber of Victoria, and an individual from its leader board, Aly was consistently consulted on current undertakings and news programs. The Guardian, The Australian, The Australian Financial Review, The Sydney Morning Herald, and The Age are among the publications that have featured his social and political commentary. Currently[when?] He writes a column for Fairfax Media every two weeks. In looking because of purposes for the self destruction assaults in focal London on 7 July 2005, Aly helped perusers to remember the Quranic section, Don’t let the shamefulness of others lead you into unfairness.