Ramita Navai (Persian: ñçàÃÂêç ÃÂÃÂçÃÂÃÂ; born 21 July 1973) is a British journalist, documentary maker, and author. She is known for her investigative human rights reporting in dangerous environments and has reported from over 40 countries.
Navai has won many awards, including two Emmy Awards, two Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Awards, and two Royal Television Society Awards, as well as literary awards, including the Debut Political Book of the Year Award for City of Lies: Love, Sex, Death and the Search for Truth in Tehran.
Navai appeared as herself in a scene with Mandy Patinkin in the TV series Homeland. She has been a guest on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart and has been interviewed about her life and work by Terry Gross for NPRâÂÂs Fresh Air.
She is the creator and host of The Line of Fire, a Top 10 Apple podcast about the moment of facing death.
Ramita Navai was born in Tehran, Iran, on 21 July 1973. Following the 1979 Islamic Revolution, she and her family permanently returned to London, where her mother grew up. Navai attended Putney High School and has a postgraduate degree in journalism from City, University of London, where she was recognized as Young Journalist of the Year (2003) by the Broadcast Journalism Training Council for her short film on transgender legislation in the UK.
She was voted Alumna of the Year of the Girlsâ Day School Trust in 2023 for her work with âÂÂwomenâÂÂs and girlsâ issues in some of the most war-torn and conflicted regions in the worldâÂÂ.
Navai began her career in 2003 as the Tehran correspondent for The Times. She then joined Channel 4's critically acclaimed current affairs series Unreported World in 2006, making 20 documentaries. Her reports included vigilante killings in Guatemala, gang assassins in El Salvador, war in South Sudan, blood diamonds in Zimbabwe, femicide in Papua New Guinea, and state violence against Amazonian tribes in Peru.
Navai and director Wael Dabbous were the first Western TV documentary crew to film undercover with Syrian activists and fighters in 2011, for which she won her first Emmy Award.
Navai also made various features for ITN/Channel 4 News, including investigating child sex trafficking in India, and police gang-killings in Brazil.
Her investigative feature exposing a people-smuggling kidnap gang violently holding hundreds of refugees for ransom resulted in the Macedonian police arresting 16 people traffickers and rescuing nearly 200 refugees in raids.[5] [6] The report won The Foreign Press Association News Story of the Year, as well as a Royal Television Society award.
Since 2016, Navai has been making investigative documentaries for Channel 4âÂÂs Dispatches, Frontline PBS and ITVâÂÂs Exposure, about subjects including the war against ISIS and Shia militia assassins in Iraq.
Her documentary IndiaâÂÂs Rape Scandal, about the cover-up of rapes in India by police and powerful politicians, was named as one of the Top 10 TV programmes of 2021 by the UKâÂÂs The Observer.
For her documentary No Country for Women (ITV)/Afghanistan Undercover (Frontline), Navai secretly filmed inside a Taliban prison, winning an Emmy award, a Royal Television Society Presenter of the Year award, a Grierson, a DuPont-Colombia silver Baton, a Rose dâÂÂOr and an Overseas Press Club of America Award.[citations needed]
Navai presented the findings of her documentary The UN Sex Abuse Scandal (Channel 4/Frontline) to MEPs in the European Parliament.
Her work has been used by human rights groups, such as Amnesty International, and in government reports. She has taken part in several UK parliamentary briefings.
She has written for many publications, including The Sunday Times, The Guardian, The Independent, the New Statesman, and The Irish Times.
City of Lies: Love, Sex, Death and the Search for Truth in Tehran was published in the UK by Weidenfeld and Nicolson in May 2014 and in the US by PublicAffairs in September 2014. It has been translated into several languages. City of Lies won Debut Political Book of the Year Award at the Political Book Awards as well as the Royal Society of Literature's Jerwood Award. It was a Book of the Year in both the Evening Standard (2014) and The Spectator.
Nick Hornby said, âÂÂNavaiâÂÂs gripping, heartbreaking book â¦City of Lies is an extraordinary piece of work about an extraordinary society.âÂÂ
Richard Osman named City of Lies as one of his favourite books, saying it was a beautiful book that made him cry and changed his thinking.
Anthony Loyd said, "One of the worldâÂÂs most exciting cities, as revealed by one of journalismâÂÂs most exciting women. Navai slips effortlessly into the boots of earthy, urban writer to tour TehranâÂÂs ripped backsides in this intimate, grand guignol debut. She transports us through the Iranian capitalâÂÂs multiple personas with deft and knowing navigation: never short of love for even the lowliest of her fellow Tehranis. An intimate and devoted portrait, lifting a beautiful truth from a city masked in lies."
Eliza Griswold, The Sunday Telegraph said, "NavaiâÂÂs prose is startling ... NavaiâÂÂs characters observe the wrecked beauty of the world around them. Through these observations, the book is elevated far above typical reportage."
Jon Stewart, The Daily Show stated, "The stories are beautiful, and theyâÂÂre so well-detailed and nuanced."
Navai wrote: âÂÂIran Coming out from the Cold?â in this collection of essays written by academics and writers, including Avi Shlaim, James Barr, Khaled Fahmy and Selma Dabbagh and edited by Raja Shehadeh and Penny Johnson. Published by Profile Books.
Ian Birrell wrote in the Guardian: âÂÂThe journalist Ramita Navai delivers a strong analysis of the tensions bubbling away in Iran and asks whether the emerging alliance between Tehran and Washington can ever be more than a temporary tactical union."