Amna Nawaz Biography

Amna Nawaz is a TV journalist who works for PBS NewsHour as a chief correspondent and substitutes anchor. Nawaz worked as an anchor and correspondent for ABC News and NBC News before joining PBS in April 2018. She has won numerous accolades, including an Emmy and a Society for Features Journalism award.

Amna Nawaz Age

Nawaz is 42 years old as of 2021. She was born on 18 September 1979 in Virginia, United States.

Amna Nawaz Height

Nawaz stands at a height of 5 feet 7 inches.

Amna Nawaz Family

Nawaz was born in Pakistan to Pakistani parents. Shuja Nawaz (brother of Pakistani Army Chief Asif Nawaz Janjua) was a journalist in Pakistan when she was born.

Amna Nawaz  Husband / Daughters

Nawaz is married to Paul Werdel. The couple married in 2007. The couple has two daughters and they together live in the Washington, D.C. area.

Amna Nawaz Education

Nawaz graduated from the University of Pennsylvania with a bachelor’s degree in politics, philosophy, and economics in 2001, where she also co-captained the women’s varsity field hockey team. She graduated from the London School of Economics with a master’s degree in comparative politics.

Amna Nawaz Salary

Nawaz has been very secretive with her annual pay scale as of now, 2021. However, there is no doubt that she has been accustomed to good pay in terms of salary as she has been able to work with profound films. Nonetheless, we will update the site as soon as we get more information on the same from our trusted sources.

Amna Nawaz Net Worth

Nawaz has also not declared her net worth to the public as of now. Nonetheless, there is no doubt that she has been able to accumulate a good figure in terms of her net worth throughout her career in the film industry. However, we will update the site as soon as we get more information on the same.

Amna Nawaz Photo
Amna Nawaz Photo

Amna Nawaz Career

Nawaz was an anchor and correspondent at ABC News before joining NewsHour, anchoring breaking news coverage and overseeing the network’s digital coverage of the 2016 presidential election. She previously worked for NBC News as a foreign correspondent, reporting from Pakistan, Afghanistan, Syria, Turkey, and the rest of the area. She is also the originator and former managing editor of NBC’s Asian America platform, which was created to give a voice to America’s fastest-growing demographic.

Nawaz has covered politics, foreign affairs, education, climate change, culture, and sports for NewsHour. Her reporting on immigration has taken her to a number of border towns in Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and Mexico. She’s looked into the consequences of Trump’s immigration policy, including following a single toddler as she left her home in Mexico, was separated from her family at the U.S. border, and was reunited with her family many weeks later. She also covers imprisonment, refugees and asylum, and migrant children in US government care on a daily basis. Nawaz has spoken with international leaders such as Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Scotland’s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon, and Brazilian President Eduardo Bolsonaro, as well as lawmakers and Trump administration officials such as former ICE Director Mark Morgan, Acting Secretary of Homeland Security Kevin McAleenan, and former DHS Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen in her first interview since leaving the Trump administration.

Her work has brought her to Appalachia to cover healthcare and the economy, the Pacific Northwest to cover gentrification and housing discrimination, and towns across the country to get a sense of the country’s political pulse. She’s flown to Brazil to report on climate change and the Venezuelan refugee crisis from within the Amazon. In 2019, she won a Peabody Award for her reporting on the worldwide plastic epidemic as part of a NewsHour series.

Nawaz reported for ABC News on the documentary “Roberts County: A Year in the Most Pro-Trump Town,” which followed four families’ lives during President Trump’s first year in office, and hosted the podcast “Uncomfortable,” which featured in-depth, one-on-one conversations with thought leaders on the issues dividing America. Her work was previously featured on NBC Nightly News, The Today Show, Dateline NBC, MSNBC, and MSNBC.com while she was at NBC News. She was the first foreign journalist allowed inside North Waziristan, the then-global stronghold of Al Qaida and the Taliban, and served as the Islamabad Bureau Chief and Correspondent for NBC for several years. She covered Malala Yousafzai’s assassination by the Taliban, the US raid on Osama bin Laden’s compound, and a series of exclusive reporting on the consequences of US drone strikes. Nawaz covered the U.S. housing crisis and the BP oil disaster for the network’s investigative team, as well as Barack Obama’s election and inauguration, the Haiti earthquake, and Hurricane Katrina.

Nawaz began her career as a Nightline Fellow at ABC News. When the Sept. 11 attacks happened just weeks into her first job, Nawaz was given the opportunity to work on one of the most important news events in recent times, which set the precedent for the rest of her career.

Nawaz has also been honored with an Emmy Award for the NBC News Special “Inside the Obama White House,” a Society for Features Journalism Award, and was a recipient of the International Reporting Project fellowship in 2009. She earned a bachelor’s degree from the University of Pennsylvania, where she captained the varsity field hockey team, and later earned her master’s degree from the London School of Economics.

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