Friday, February 24, 2012 | 6:00pm-7:30pm
MIT Media Lab, E14 6th Floor
Co-Hosts:
Wadah Khanfar is president of the Sharq Forum, an international think
tank focused on political and economic development in the Arab world,
and former director general of the Al Jazeera network. Under Khanfar's
leadership, Al Jazeera offered to the world a front-row seat to witness
the fall of dictatorships in Tunisia and Egypt, and the wave of
rebellion that swept the Arab world. A year later, Khanfar reflects on
the hopes raised by the Arab Spring, the changes that have—and
haven't—taken place, and the challenges Egypt and other countries face
on the road towards democracy.
Khanfar's talk will be followed by a dialogue with Joi Ito, director of
the MIT Media Lab; Ethan Zuckerman, director of MIT's Center for Civic
Media; and Mohamed Nanabhay, head of online at Al Jazeera English, as
well as questions and answers with the audience.
Wadah Khanfar first appeared as a commentator on Al Jazeera shortly
after the network was founded, in 1996. In that role, he developed a
reputation for a willingness to report from the front lines of
international conflict, managing the network's Kabul bureau, reporting
from Kurdish Iraq, and serving as bureau chief for Baghdad after the
fall of Saddam Hussein. In 2003, he became managing director of Al
Jazeera, and in 2006, director general. He announced his resignation
from the network in September 2011, and subsequently co-founded the
Sharq Foundation.
In 2011, Khanfar was one of Foreign Policy magazine's Top 100
Global Thinkers, and headed Fast Company's list of the 100 Most Creative
People in Business. He was also named one of the most "Powerful People
in the World" by Forbes magazine in 2009.
Last updated March 01, 2012