Benjamin Barthe (born 1972) is a French journalist.

Biography edit

Benjamin was born in Senlis. After studying history, Barthe joined the Centre de formation des journalistes in Paris and graduated in 1996.

He began his career as a collaborator of the Egyptian magazine Al-Ahram as part of his national cooperation service, before joining the regional daily La Provence in 1998, then the communist daily L'Humanité (1999–2001), and eventually Le Nouvel Observateur (2001–2002).

As a correspondent in Ramallah, the administrative capital of the Palestinian Authority, of the weekly L'Express and the daily Le Monde, he also collaborates with televisions and radios: RFI, RSR, RTBF, France Culture, TV5Monde and ITV.

After having two kids, he came back to France, and then got to Lebanon in 2014, as a correspondent for Le Monde in the Middle East. He wrote mostly about Syria from 2014 to 2019, then, with the Lebanese revolution, started writing articles about Lebanon, and its economical crisis.

In 2021, he left Lebanon with his family and got to Paris, where he stopped writing as the Le Monde correspondent for the Middle East. He did not stop writing in Le Monde, as he still publishes articles.[1]

Prizes edit

In May 2008, Benjamin Barthe was awarded the Prix Albert-Londres for his articles on the Gaza strip published in Le Monde and L'Express between April 2007 and January 2008.

References edit

  1. ^ "Benjamin Barthe, ses dernières publications dans Le Monde". Le Monde.fr. Retrieved 11 January 2022.

External links edit