Rana Ayyub

Journalist

Birthday May 1, 1984

Birth Sign Taurus

Birthplace Mumbai, Maharashtra, India

Age 39 years old

Nationality India

#48819 Most Popular

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Rana Ayyub is an Indian journalist and opinion columnist with The Washington Post.

She is author of the investigative book Gujarat Files: Anatomy of a Cover Up.

Rana Ayyub was born in Mumbai, India.

Her father Mohammad Ayyub Waqif, was a writer with Blitz, a Mumbai-based magazine, and an important member of the progressive writers movement.

1992

The city witnessed riots in 1992–93, during which time the family moved to the Muslim-majority suburb of Deonar, which is where Rana largely grew up.

Ayyub is a practising Muslim.

Rana's worked for Tehelka (lit. "commotion/uproar"), a Delhi-based investigative and political news magazine.

Rana has previously been critical of the BJP in general and Narendra Modi.

2002

As an investigative journalist working with Tehelka, Rana Ayyub took up a project to conduct a prolonged sting operation aimed at snaring politicians and government officials of Gujarat and get them to reveal any potential cover-ups regarding the Gujarat riots of 2002.

Rana Posing as Maithili Tyagi, a filmmaker from the American Film Institute, and set about befriending her intended targets.

She spent around ten months in disguise, and got paid a regular monthly salary from Tehelka during this period.

However, at the end of the exercise, the management of Tehelka felt that the recordings which she had made over the months did not provide any new or sensational information, that the data gathered by her was of inadequate quality, and that they could not publish any story on the basis of the new data.

In her book Gujarat Files: Anatomy of a Cover Up, Ayyub documented the verbatim transcripts of recordings, made using a concealed recording device, of many bureaucrats and police officers of Gujarat.

The recordings were made in the course of an undercover investigation to reveal the views of bureaucrats and police officers on the post-2002 Gujarat riots and Police encounter killings.

Ayyub had been posing as 'Maithili Tyagi', a student of the American Film Institute, having an ideological affinity for the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh's beliefs, to enable her to make the recordings.

Tarun Tejpal and Shoma Chaudhury have disputed Ayyub's claim that her story on fake encounters in Gujarat, which was the result of an eight-month long undercover investigation, was dropped by them.

According to Tejpal, Ayyub's story was "incomplete".

According to Chaudhury, Ayyub's story "did not meet the necessary editorial standards."

Ayyub has responded to Tejpal and Chaudhury's assertions by noting that:"I must say I am not the only one to complain about dropped stories in Tehelka, the list is fairly big… Shoma Choudhury and Tarun Tejpal of Tehelka cited editorial decisions and gaps. The book is a bestseller and is getting rave reviews for its content. Let the reader be the judge."

Historian Ramachandra Guha had called Ayyub's Gujarat Files "a brave book."

Jyoti Malhotra has noted that many journalists have privately applauded Ayyub's courage in authoring Gujarat Files.

Priya Ramani has commented: "The abuses from the paid foot soldiers on Twitter bounce off her spiral curls smoothly."

Reflecting on the procedure used by Ayyub in composing Gujarat Files, Nilanjan Mukhopadhyay has observed: "Going undercover and interviewing many who had been in the thick of gruesome extra-constitutional operations required bravado and this must be appreciated."

Ayyub's investigation of the alleged Gujarat fake encounters has been listed by Outlook magazine as one of the twenty greatest magazine stories of all time across the world.

2010

By her own account, a report done by Rana Ayyub was instrumental in sending Amit Shah, a close associate of Narendra Modi, to jail for several months in 2010.

At Tehelka, Rana worked as an investigative journalist and her big assignment was to carry out the sting operation upon which her book Gujarat Files was based.

At the end of the sting operation, the management of Tehelka refused to publish any story written by Rana or based on the data collected by her.

Rana continued to work with Tehelka for several months more.

2013

In November 2013, her boss Tarun Tejpal, the editor-in-chief and major shareholder of Tehelka, was accused of sexual harassment by one of his journalist subordinates.

Rana Ayyub resigned from Tehelka in protest against the organisation's handling of the charge against Tejpal.

She now works independently.

2018

In 2018, Ayyub was awarded the "most Resilient Global journalist" by Dutch non-profit Free Press Unlimited for resisting attempts to stifle her work.

In the Haren Pandya murder case, the Supreme Court of India dismissed Rana Ayyub's book, stating that "it is based upon surmises, conjectures, and suppositions and has no evidentiary value.".

Ayyub termed the court's comments "puzzling", stating that the CBI had used her work as evidence in other related cases, and noting that no officer or bureaucrat had denied her claims or taken her to court.

In February 2022, Ayyub received scrutiny after the Enforcement Directorate (ED) locked assets worth over ₹1.77 crore of hers.

This was done in relation to a money laundering case filed against her, for allegedly embezzling funds she acquired from the public in the name of charity.

ED stated that Ayyub had transferred those funds to other accounts for personal spendings.

The money laundering charges against Ayyub have been described as sham charges by international observers.

2019

In September 2019, Washington Post hired her as its contributing writer to the Global Opinions section.

2020

In October 2020, HarperCollins India published an open letter written by Ayyub, to protest the controversial appointment of Actor Gajendra Chauhan as the Chairman of Film and Television Institute of India (FTII), as part of the book Inquilab: A Decade of Protest which contains speeches, lectures and letters said to "capture the most important events and issues of the past ten years."