Broadcaster,
author, journalist, politician
Both of Martin Bell's careers, as foreign affairs
correspondent and more recently as politician, have
been remarkably colourful.
As one of the most distinguished foreign affairs
reporters of his generation, Martin Bell was among
those who defined the term "war correspondent".
He later stole the show in the 2001 election campaign
with his anti-sleaze battle against MP Neil Hamilton.
It all began in 1962, when Martin Bell joined
the BBC in Norwich aged 24 with a first-class
honours degree from King's College, Cambridge,
behind him.
The call to London came three years later, and
soon he was in Ghana on his first foreign assignment.
Over the next 30 years, he reported from 80 countries
and covered 11 conflicts. He made his name in
Vietnam in the 1960s, and also covered wars in
the Middle East, Nigeria, Angola and Rwanda, as
well as numerous assignments in Northern Ireland.
His sparse, uncompromising style of journalism
won him the Royal Television Society's Reporter
of the Year award in 1977, and again in 1993.
He was awarded an OBE in 1992.
It was his last assignment for the BBC, however,
which had the greatest impact on him, both physically
and mentally. He was badly wounded by shrapnel
as he delivered a bulletin from Sarajevo, his
"lucky" white suit letting him down
for once as he fell to the ground in agony.
And what he saw while covering the war awoke a
smouldering sense of injustice which was to define
his future career.
With just 24 days to go before the 1997 general
election, he made the surprise announcement that
he was leaving the BBC to enter politics.
His legendary fight for the safe Conservative
seat at Tatton, on an independent, anti-corruption
ticket, made him a symbol of the revolt against
perceived sleaze in the governing Conservative
Party. He won the seat with an 11,000 majority.
Describing himself as an "accidental MP",
Martin Bell was persuaded to run again in the
2001 election, this time for Brentwood and Ongar,
in Essex - another constituency where the sitting
Conservative MP, Eric Pickles, was at the centre
of controversy.
He did not win the seat, and immediately announced
his retirement from politics, saying, "I
have won one seat and lost one - that's not a
bad record for an amateur."
Martin now acts as an ambassador for UNICEF, as
an outspoken critic of the state of journalism
today and a highly sought after public speaker.
He is married with two daughters, and now describes
himself as "too old" for both journalism
and politics.
Books
In Harms Way (1995)
An Accidental MP (2000)
Through Gates of Fire (2003) |