Aziz Haniffa, Executive Editor of India Abroad, received the Outstanding Industry Leadership Award for Excellence in Journalism at the recent 18th Annual Awards Banquet 2017 of the U.S.-India Chamber of Commerce. This was the first time in the USICOC’s 18-year history that the USICOC had given its Leadership Award– traditionally awarded to a businessperson or [...]

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Aziz Haniffa honoured with leadership award

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Aziz Haniffa, Executive Editor of India Abroad, received the Outstanding Industry Leadership Award for Excellence in Journalism at the recent 18th Annual Awards Banquet 2017 of the U.S.-India Chamber of Commerce.

The presentation was made by India’s Ambassador to the U.S., Navtej Sarna, while former U.S. Ambassador to India Rich Verma looks on. From left to right are Neel Gonuguntla, president USICOC, Mahesh Shetty, chairman, USICOC, Carl Ice, president and CEO, BNSF Railway Company, who delivered the keynote address on the State of the Economy, Ashok Mago, founding chairman of USICOC (hidden), Haniffa, Ambassador Sarna and Ambassador Verma.

This was the first time in the USICOC’s 18-year history that the USICOC had given its Leadership Award– traditionally awarded to a businessperson or industrialist– to a media person. The presentation was made by India’s Ambassador to the U.S., Navtej Sarna at a formal ceremony in Washington DC.

Haniffa, is perhaps the first and only South Asian journalist based in the U.S., who has relentlessly covered U.S.-South Asia relations and the South Asian American community for the past three decades. The Sri-Lankan born Haniffa, an erstwhile Thomian and ex-rugby play–a burly prop forward–immigrated to the U.S. in the early 1980s after graduating from the University of Sri Lanka, double majoring in English and Economics, with a brief stint as a sub-editor and foreign affairs columnist in the Sun/Weekend of the now defunct Independent Newspapers Ltd.

After completing his master’s degree at George Washington University in Washington, D.C,, double-majoring in Political Science and International Affairs, he joined India Abroad–the oldest and largest circulating Indian/South Asian newspaper in the U.S.— as a reporter in the late 1980s, and is now the newspaper’s executive editor.

While based in D.C., in the 1980s and 1990’s, he also reported for the SUN and later the Sri Lanka Daily News and along with Thalif Deen, Iqbal Athas, Faizal Samath, covered the late President Junius Jayawardene’s state visit to the U.S. in 1984 at the invitation of then U.S. President Ronald Reagan.

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