Hamdi Qandil

Hamdi Qandil
Born1936 (1936)
Cairo, Egypt
Died31 October 2018(2018-10-31) (aged 81–82)
Cairo, Egypt
EducationUniversity of Alexandria (1952)
Cairo University-Qasr El-Ainy Faculty of Medicine (1953–1956)
Occupation(s)Journalist, newsman, talk show host, political activist
Years active1956–2018
Known forNews talk shows Aqwal al-Suhf ("In the Press"), Ra'is el-Tahrir ("Editor-in-Chief") and Qalam Rosas ("Pencil")
Columns in Akher Sa'a and other Egyptian publications
TelevisionEgyptian television and Dream TV (1961–1969, 1998–2003)
Dubai TV (2004–2008)
Al-Libia (2008)
MovementNational Association for Change (February–June 2010)
Egyptian Popular Current (September 2012–2018)
SpouseNaglaa Fathi

Hamdi Qandil (Arabic: حمدي قنديل Ḥamdī Qandīl, also Romanized Qandeel or Kandil; 1936 – 31 October 2018) was a prominent Egyptian journalist, news anchor, talk show host and activist.[1] Qandil started his journalism career in the 1950s when he wrote for the Akher Sa'a ("Last Hour") magazine at the invitation of veteran journalist Mustafa Amin. In 1961 he began broadcasting a news show called Aqwal al-Suhuf ("In the Press") until 1969 when he was appointed director of the Arab Broadcasting Studios Union. In 1971 he left his post in protest at a government inspection of his technical staff. He later worked with UNESCO from 1974 to 1986, specializing in the field of international media. In 1987 he co-founded a satellite broadcasting company that later became known as MBC, where he worked for three months before leaving because of political differences with its management. Qandil briefly presented the show Ma'a Hamdi Qandil ("With Hamdi Qandil") for ART, but left amid disagreements between him and his managers regarding Qandil's planned interviews with Muammar Gaddafi and Tariq Aziz.

He returned to Egyptian television in 1998, hosting the current affairs and press review talk show Ra'is el-Tahrir ("Editor-in-Chief"). The program became one of the most popular and respected in Egypt. After apparent trouble with the state censors, Qandil moved the show to Dubai TV in 2004 under the name Qalam Rosas ("Pencil"). The new program was highly watched throughout the Arab world. He was forced to quit Dubai TV after criticizing Arab governments and subsequently hosted the show on the Libyan channel Al-Libiya for two months before the Libyan government cancelled it. He returned to Egypt and wrote for the Al-Masry Al-Youm newspaper and then Al-Shorouk, but his association with the latter ended as a result of a libel suit brought on by then-Egyptian foreign minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit in response to a column critical of Egyptian foreign policy written by Qandil in May 2010. The case was later dropped following the 2011 Egyptian Revolution.

Qandil was well known for his pan-Arabist discourse and fierce criticism of the Egyptian and other Arab governments.[2][3][4] According to Al-Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies political analyst Diaa Rashwan, Qandil "is a great Egyptian journalist and highly credible, he is bold and gives constructive criticism ... people listen to him and take what he says seriously, which is why he poses a threat" to the government.[5] Prior to the Egyptian revolution, Qandil co-founded the National Association for Change, a reformist group headed by Mohamed ElBaradei. From September 2012, Qandil had lent his support to the Egyptian Popular Current opposition movement.

  1. ^ Said, Rania. A Few Good Men: Hamdi Qandeel Archived 29 June 2013 at archive.today. Identity Magazine. 2011.
  2. ^ Veteran Journalist Hamdi Kandil Discusses Revolution at AUC[permanent dead link]. The American University in Cairo. 6 March 2011.
  3. ^ Cite error: The named reference DNEAasar was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  4. ^ Nasrawi, Saif. Pro-ElBaradei journalist faces criminal trial over minister 'insult'. Egypt Independent. Originally published by Agence France-Presse. 9 June 2010.
  5. ^ Cite error: The named reference DNE09 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

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