Sarah Mukherjee
Sarah Mukherjee (born 1967) is a former BBC Environment Correspondent. She was born in London, and was educated at Loughton County High School in Essex, before attending St Hilda's College, Oxford, where she read Law. After working at the House of Commons of the United Kingdom in PR and consultancy, Mukherjee completed her diploma in Journalism at the Polytechnic of Central London.
In 2005 she was granted the first interview with the Prince of Wales for more than a decade, in which he spoke of his concerns about the environment.[1]
Mukherjee's mother was a single parent, and she spent much of her childhood on a council estate in Essex. She wrote, in the BBC's internal magazine, Ariel, of her concerns about the portrayal by the media of the white, working-class people she grew up with.[2]
She was a regular contributor on Radio 4's Today programme, often reporting live from rural areas countryside and rural issues.
In 2017, she took up the post of Chief Executive of the Crop Protection Association.
References
- "Prince's plea over climate change", BBC News, 27 October 2005
- Cited by Nicole Martin "BBC series 'labels white working class racist'", Daily Telegraph, 12 March 2008
External links
- Sarah Mukherjee "Queues at conference", BBC News, 4 October 2006
- Today: Friday 25 September 2009, Sarah Mukherjee reports on Britain's Spider population (at 07:24)
- Farewell Sarah Mukherjee, a selection of her BBC reports