eteran journalist Sir Charles Wheeler, the BBCs longest-serving foreign correspondent, has died at the age of 85 after suffering from lung cancer
July 4, 2008
Veteran journalist Sir Charles Wheeler, the BBCs longest-serving foreign correspondent, has died at the age of 85 after suffering from lung cancer.
A reporter, presenter and producer, he covered stories such as the assassination of Martin Luther King and Watergate when based in Washington.
He spent eight years in the US capital, also reporting on the shooting of presidential candidate Robert Kennedy.
He was considered "a legend", BBC director general Mark Thompson said.
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"His integrity, his authority and his humanity graced the BBCs airwaves over many decades," he added.
"He is utterly irreplaceable but like everyone else, I am privileged to have worked with him."
Sir Charles, who was born in the German city of Bremen, began his media career at the Daily Sketch newspaper.
He ran errands at the now-defunct publication, having been inspired to become a journalist by a film he had seen as a teenager.
Magnificent man
After five years in the Marines at the end of World War II, he joined the BBC in 1947 and spent 11 years as a writer and reporter for the BBC World Service.
Spells as the corporations correspondent in South Asia and Germany followed, before his move to Washington.
He was also known as one of the faces of the BBCs Panorama and Newsnight programmes.
In pictures: Sir Charles Wheeler
He received a knighthood for services to journalism in 2006, and won two Baftas and several Royal Television Society awards - including one in 1997 for a documentary on the murder of London teenager Stephen Lawrence.
Mark Damazer, the controller of BBC Radio 4, said Sir Charles was a "magnificent" man who "embodied all that is best in the BBCs journalism".
"He had a brilliant eye and an unequalled ability to convey what he saw and what he knew."
Mr Damazer said Sir Charless work for Radio 4 over the past decade "demonstrated his astonishing range, dealing with central and eastern Europe, but also - and superbly - with the legacy at home of World War II".
He had been working "almost until he died" on a programme for Radio 4 on the Dalai Lama, Mr Damazer added.
As a reporter Sir Charles had covered the flight of the Dalai Lama after the Chinese invaded Tibet in 1959.
News dumbed down
UK Foreign Secretary David Miliband described Sir Charles as "one of the great reporters of the television age".
"With his ability to combine vivid reporting with fearless but fair judgement, he made an unforgettable mark on so many of the great stories of his day."
Sir Charles admitted that he preferred being in the field to doing studio work
In recent years, Sir Charles was critical of the direction of modern broadcasting.
He claimed in 2000 that television news was "dumbing down" and said the BBC had "lost its way with news".
He met his future wife, Dip Singh, during his four-year posting in Delhi. They married in 1962 and had two daughters.
One of them, Shirin, works in Brussels for the BBC as a correspondent on European politics.
The other, Marina, is a lawyer and is the wife of Londons mayor, Boris Johnson.
BBC Radio 4 will be paying tribute with a special 45-minute programme, Charles Wheeler In His Own Wordsat 1100 BST on Saturday, 5 July or afterwards at the Listen Againpage.


