A person with curly hair, wearing a white top and dark blazer, gazes confidently at the camera against a neutral background.

Rana Ayyub

Rana Ayyub is an Indian investigative journalist and a global opinions writer at the Washington Post. She has worked as a reporter, Editor and columnist with some of the leading publications in India and internationally. Her pieces appear in the Time, New York Times, Guardian, Atlantic and Foreign Policy and she has been profiled for the cover of the New Yorker. Rana has reported extensively on majoritarian politics and violence, extrajudicial killings by the state, Islamophobia, communalism and authored an international bestseller titled  Gujarat Files: Anatomy of a Cover-Up. Rana’s work is focused on the marginalized and the oppressed, she advocates and reports about the fight against misinformation and the protection of democratic ideas. It is for this work that she has faced extreme forms of persecution by the Indian government which includes filing multiple cases for which she is facing trial in India. In a career spanning eighteen years, Rana has been awarded the Sanskriti award for integrity and excellence in journalism by the former President of India. She was the recipient of the
Global Shining Light award for Investigative journalism in the year 2017 and the Most Resilient Global Journalist of 2018 at the Peace Palace in Hague. In 2019, she was named by Time magazine among ten global journalists who faced maximum threats to their lives across the world. In the year, 2018, The United Nations allotted six special rapporteurs to the Indian government to protect her safety, a first for an individual case in India. In 2020, she was announced as the recipient of the McMgill medal for journalistic courage. In the year 2021 she was given the award for ‘Excellence in Journalism and International Human
rights by Texas University. In 2022, she was awarded the Overseas Press Club Award for her incisive commentary on India. In the year 2022 again, she was awarded the John Aubuchon press freedom honour, the highest journalism award by the Press Club in the United States. In 2024, the Canadian Free press Association awarded her as the journalist of the year for her journalism and her efforts to fight for a Free Press. She lives in Mumbai with her family.