Nima Elbagir
Brian Whitaker, Middle East editor of the Guardian, interviews Sudanese newscaster Nima Elbagir.

Nima Elbagir was born in Sudan, came to Britain at the age of three, went back to Sudan at the age of eight, came to Britain again at 14 and returned to Sudan once more at 22. She is now living in Britain again. Nima's travels, and those of her family, mirror her homeland's turbulent politics.
"My father was an opposition politician and journalist," she said. "He was in prison before I was born. Then he was released and we went into exile." By 1985, the situation changed again and her father went back. "He had his own newspaper at that point, an independent newspaper called Al Khartoum." But it was only a few years before a coup came. Her father happened to be abroad at the time, and decided not to return home.
As a result of all this, Nima's education was split between Britain and Sudan, followed by a degree in philosophy at the London School of Economics. "My parents wanted me to be a doctor," she said, "but I really wanted to be a journalist, so they said OK. After graduating in 2002, I went back home. The peace deal was slowly starting and I thought it was the end of press censorship, but actually it was the height of it.
"I worked at an English-language newspaper for about two weeks. It was a southern Sudanese paper, very much a 'cause' newspaper, so the journalism was on a back seat to the ending of the civil war and southern Sudanese autonomy. I just didn't feel at home there."
After that, she worked in Sudan as a local correspondent for Reuters before joining More4 News (the digital arm of Channel 4 News) where she is now, at 28, a rising star, having won one award and being nominated for several others.
Nima is northern Sudanese. "My mother's family is from the Nubian territories but my dad's tribe is Arab, from Al Jazira, which is just east of the Nile. He came to Khartoum at 14, I think. He was an only son, and his father was a tribal leader but he died when he was very young. After arriving in Khartoum, my dad worked and studied at night. At 21, he was the spokesman for the foreign minister."
Having a life divided between Britain and Sudan, does she feel Arab? "I feel Sudanese Arab, which I think is very different," she said.
"My father is very pan-Arab and he's horrified by any kind of African identity, but I think our generation is very aware of the fact that in Sudan, because of the way we were pulled into the Arab League by [Gamal Abdul] Nasser, we didn't have an opportunity to develop a national identity. We don't have a national identity, and I'm very conscious of that.
"But I think I'm very Arab in terms of cultural outlook, and very Islamic. I'm a lot of very different things. In Sudan we're Nubian, we're Arab, we have a lot of Turkish blood, and then in the south...What I love about being Sudanese is that you can be any colour from green-eyed, light-skinned, all the way through to black."
She has never applied for a British passport. For a long time this was a matter of principle, she explained. "My identity was always so half-and-half. It was a very conscious thing on my part. I graduated in the year of September 11, and I think that was the point when I realised I wasn't English. I realised I'm not 100% at home here, and I shouldn't be.
"My mother gets very angry when she sees stuff like Abu Hamza on TV: 'These people, they took you in, how can you behave in this way?' It horrifies her, her basic concepts of how you behave as a guest in somebody else's country. For me, that's when I realised I was a guest here."
But not for much longer, perhaps. Nima is now engaged to a British diplomat whom she met in Sudan. "I'll probably have to take British citizenship," she said with just a hint of reluctance. "My family really likes him. He speaks Arabic but he's not an orientalist. He doesn't have the romantic view of my world."
Along with her brother and two sisters, Nima was not allowed to speak English at home. "My mother was so worried that we'd have an English accent in Arabic," she said. But now she describes herself as one of the 'Arabisi' generation: a blend of Arabi [Arabic] and Inglisi [English].
"It's a description of this generation that falls between the cracks," she said. "Their lingua franca is to express what best they can in English, and the rest in Arabic. There are things that are perfectly expressed in Arabic. You have jamal which is beauty, and then you have al samaha, which is a kind of internal beauty giving external beauty. You don't really have that [in English].
"We kind of swap languages, and there's this perfect word. I think you always feel really stupid expressing love in Arabic. You can express respect, but even with my parents I say 'I love you' in English. It's one of those weird things."
Religion is another area where Nima refuses to be pigeonholed. "As a woman, if you define yourself as a Muslim and don't fall into specific categories of Islam, then [people think] you're not a proper Muslim, or in some way you aren't a feminist, or you're letting yourself down. The beauty of Islam is that you interpret it, you live by it, and at the end of the day, you are the one who's judged.
"In Sudan I cover my head. That's more because of what I represent: a Sudanese girl from a certain kind of family who has studied abroad.
"When you're a journalist, these kinds of pre-conceptions weigh against people being open with you. [In Sudan] I just didn't want to open myself to not being taken seriously. If covering my head means I can get my job done...As a reporter, I went on the campaign trail with the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt. In their offices I covered my head – you're in somebody's place, so you try and respect them."
It is impossible to meet Nima without sensing a strong feminist streak. She attributes this to her Sudanese background, rather than Western influences. "I think we have incredibly strong women in Sudan. We have the best of both worlds. We have the kind of African 'the-woman-is-so-important-in-the-tribe' idea, and at the same time we have the Arab matriarchs.
"When my father left, suddenly Sudan was this military Islamo-fascist state, and for two years my mother kept the newspaper's office open. She was the first female publisher in Sudan.
"They have this trick in Sudan where if you're a woman, they don't want to be accused of throwing you in jail. What they'll do is come and get you at 6.30am and drop you home at 11pm, so nobody can say they've imprisoned you. They just 'kept you for questioning'. They did that to my mother for about a year, on and off.
"My mother is much more Islamically conservative than I am. She covers her head and wears long sleeves under her tobe [traditional Sudanese dress], but then the government decreed that the tobe wasn't Islamic. We had public-order police, and they'd drag women along the ground and tear at their clothing and say they weren’t appropriately dressed.
"My mother put a cattle whip in her car and said: 'The first one of those idiots who stops me and says I'm not dressed Islamically, that's it!' I remember her ranting: 'I've been to Mecca in this. How dare they!'
"My grandmother kept pigeons because all her sons were communists. She would hide all the leaflets and stuff that they used to distribute in the pigeon coop, so when the National Security came she'd be like: 'How dare you! I'm a woman. There's no one in this house'. And all of the leaflets would be in the back of the pigeon coop."
Nima is one of two Muslims working at More4 News, in a team of about 10. "When they recruited me, I think they wanted someone with a completely different perspective," she said. Her work has regularly taken her back to Sudan, mainly to cover the Darfur conflict.
"When I started covering it, I was with Reuters. I was really confused in my own head about what was happening. The amazing thing about Reuters is that you state other people's words. There's never an opportunity for your own confusion to bleed onto the page. That's what I loved. I was able to go there, and these people who had no one to tell it to were able to say in their own words what was happening to them.
"There's so much denial in Sudan and the Arab world, and I think the spectre of the Arab-Israeli conflict kind of hangs over any self-criticism. It's 'Oh no! It was done to us. We don't do it to ourselves. We don't do it to each other'. I'd have conversations with Arab friends, and they'd say: 'Isn't it awful what these Western journalists have been saying about Darfur'. I'd get really agitated because I'd think this is part of the problem.
"Maybe it's because my identity is very Arab that I'm so disappointed. Darfur is about people dying. You hear people say: 'We in the Arab world shouldn't allow UN troops to go into Sudan because it's compromising the sovereignty of an Arab nation'. But when you fail to protect your people, you give up your right to sovereignty. I think it has to be as simple as that. We don't do ourselves any favours in the Arab world by hiding behind each other."
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