Ian Craig Leslie OAM (born 6 July 1942)[1] is an Indonesian-born Australian television journalist and corporate communicator.
Ian Leslie | |
---|---|
Born | Ian Craig Leslie 6 July 1942 |
Nationality | Australian |
Occupation(s) | Television journalist, corporate communicator |
Years active | 1962−present |
Known for | 60 Minutes |
Spouse | Jan Leslie |
Children | Jayne Leslie, Peter Leslie |
Early life
editIan Craig Leslie was born in Java,[2] Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia). Leslie was born one of twins in Bandung, Indonesia, under Japanese occupation, to his mother Lydia. He had an elder brother, sister and two aunts. At the time, his father William was interned in a POW camp in West central Java and would not see the twins until the Japanese surrender three and a half years later. His father was from Aberdeen, Scotland, and his mother was born in Gnadenfeld, Ukraine. Both migrated from war-torn Europe for a better life in the thriving Dutch-British East Indies. His mother's family was of white Russian origin and fled their homeland to escape persecution under the Communist Bolshevik tyranny.
They raised their four children in Java, where William Leslie was a manager for a large Anglo-Dutch export company. An idyllic life ended abruptly with the Japanese Imperial Army's invasion in February 1942. For his first three years, Ian and his family spent life behind bamboo as POWs in a separate camp to his father. Despite the ravages of prison life and starvation,[3] disease, and lack of medical aid, the Leslies survived. In August 1945, at the end of the Pacific War, the Leslies were evacuated back to Scotland.[4]
In 1947, William Leslie took his family back to Indonesia to resume life and career. What they saw was a very different country to the one they had left three years earlier. Nationalism had replaced Dutch-Anglo colonial rule. Communist insurgents under President Sukarno waged a war of independence. Indonesia was no longer a safe place to raise a family, with politically motivated attacks on Europeans becoming a daily occurrence. In 1950, they moved to Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia. Ian Leslie is a member of the Australian branch of Clan Leslie.[1]
Ian was educated at Church of England Boys Prep and Toowoomba State High.
Honours and awards
edit- Logie Award 1973 Best News Report
- Walkley Award 1979 Best Current Affairs Report
- Logie Award 1981 Outstanding Public Affairs Report
- Logie Award 1985 Reporter of the Year
- Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) in the Queen's Birthday Honours 2009 for services to the media in current affairs journalism, and to the community[5]
- He was a visiting fellow at the American Library in Paris in the spring of 2019
Television career
editLeslie became a cadet journalist in Toowoomba in 1962 with the local newspaper/television group DDQ-10, rising to News Editor. He moved to Sydney in 1972 as a senior reporter with the Ten Network. In 1977, he transferred to the Nine Network to join A Current Affair.[6]
In 1979, the Australian edition of 60 Minutes was launched on the Nine Network, with Ian Leslie, Ray Martin and George Negus as the original reporting team. He remained in that role for the next 11 years, until 1989.
In his time with 60 Minutes, he is best remembered for his compassionate reporting, especially where children were involved, and for his unwavering commitment to expose suffering in Australia and in developing countries.
Leslie covered conflicts in most of the world's major trouble spots: Uganda, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Lebanon, Thailand, Cambodia, Philippines, Burma, Korea, Indonesia, Afghanistan and Northern Ireland.
He is the only Australian journalist to have interviewed the Egyptian President Anwar Sadat.[1]
He interviewed many other world leaders, including Indian Prime Minister Moraji Desai, Pakistan Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, Presidents Ferdinand Marcos (Philippines), Godfrey Beniza, Milton Obote and Yoweri Muzeweri (all of Uganda).
In 1989, he re-joined the Ten Network to manage and produce primetime documentaries and special projects, becoming the Ten Evening News anchor.[1]
In 1990, Ian Leslie formed a production company specialising in corporate communications.[1]
In 2005, he anchored Fox Television's award-winning documentary series Running On Empty.
Incident with Moro guerrilla
editOn a 60 Minutes assignment in the Philippines, a Moro guerrilla pulled a revolver from his holster, put it against Leslie's head, and pulled the trigger.[7] Leslie had no idea the gun was not loaded.
Personal life
editIn 1966, Leslie married Jan Penhaligon. They have two children—Jayne and Peter—and three grandchildren: Zavia, Tahlia, and Sienna. Jan was educated at PGC College, Warwick. She has a degree in Music, A Mus A and ATCL (Associate Trinity College London), having topped the State's music exams. Daughter Jayne has a degree in Drama from the West Australian Academy of Dramatic Arts. She runs her own business coaching company. Son Peter is an accomplished television cameraman, covering major sporting events in Australia and overseas, including the Sydney 2000 Olympics, Athens 2004 Olympics, and Beijing 2008 Olympics.
References
edit- ^ a b c d e "Ian Leslie OAM - Corporate Communicator & National identity". Clan Leslie Society of Australia and New Zealand. 4 February 2018. Archived from the original on 31 May 2019. Retrieved 11 July 2023.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ Grip Fast Down Under
- ^ "Tjideng Main Page". Archived from the original on 7 February 2009. Retrieved 6 May 2019.
- ^ "War Pension Scheme (WPS)". 7 November 2022.
- ^ "Medal (OAM) of the Order of Australia in the General Division" (PDF). Governor-General of the Commonwealth of Australia. Retrieved 10 June 2019.
- ^ "Short Takes". The Sydney Morning Herald. 24 July 1977. p. 51. Retrieved 21 June 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "A clash of faith (1982): 60 Minutes Timeless, Short Video".