Teymoor Nabili

Teymoor Nabili's picture
Teymoor Nabili
Presenter and Correspondent | Qatar
Biography

Teymoor Nabili is an award-winning news presenter and correspondent based at Al Jazeera headquarters in Doha.

He was named winner of the Best News Presenter/Anchor award at the Asian TV Awards in 2005. In addition, Teymoor has received awards from the British Royal Television Society for his coverage of the Utah Olympics bribery scandal, and from the New York Awards for reporting on economic development in Malaysia.

Follow him on Twitter: @teymoornabili

Latest posts by Teymoor Nabili

By Teymoor Nabili in Middle East on April 23rd, 2012
EPA photo

"if thought corrupts language, language can also corrupt thought."
George Orwell.

"we create our own reality of sorts. [...] We are history's actors because we have the courage to do what's necessary."
Adviser to G.W. Bush, quoted by journalist Ron Suskind

Recently, Israel's minister of intelligence and atomic energy made an unexpected admission.

By Teymoor Nabili in Middle East on April 13th, 2012
Dan Meridor, Israel's deputy prime minister [EPA]

Was it a momentary lapse of concentration or an honest admission?

Last week, in an interview with Israel's Deputy Prime Minister Dan Meridor in Jerusalem, I heard something I have not heard before.

Let's start with the background.

By Teymoor Nabili in Middle East on February 22nd, 2012
AFP photo

Almost inevitably, the latest IAEA comments regarding the visit to Iran are being framed as yet more evidence of Tehran’s defiance and duplicity.

The IISS is amongst the first to jump to conclusions with the headline "What is Iran hiding at Parchin?"

Mark Fitzpatrick writes that inspectors wanted to visit  Parchin because "US officials suspected [it] might be used for high-explosive tests related to nuclear weapons development".

By Teymoor Nabili in Middle East on November 22nd, 2011

By Teymoor Nabili in Middle East on November 10th, 2011
Photo by Reuters

A few more facts have been coming about Vyacheslav Danilenko, the Russian scientist who has supposedly been helping Iran develop nuclear weapons.

More detail here about Danilenko's background, which seemingly shows absolutely no involvement with nuclear work at all.

But was Danilenko's real expertise, nanotechnology, useful to Iran's nuclear work nonetheless? Yes, says the Washington Post.

Danilenko’s role was judged to be so critical that IAEA investigators devoted considerable effort to obtaining his cooperation, the two officials said.

By Teymoor Nabili in Middle East on November 9th, 2011
Israeli soldiers simulate a missile attack, but dismiss any connection with the speculation of possible attack on Iran [Reuters]

Really?

Tags:
By Teymoor Nabili in Middle East on October 18th, 2011
AP photo

"A leader stands alone"

Benjamin Netanyahu was presenting himself as a solitary, heroic figure.

"I considered, and I decided."

Speaking on the release of Gilad Shalit, the Israeli prime minister implied the prisoner swap deal had been entirely of his own making, and that his tough stance had prevailed.

"Talks took place in Cairo ... we stood our ground. When the majority of our demands were accepted, I had to make a decision."

It made for a great narrative, and an effective presentation, but was it true? Did Hamas finally give in to Netanyahu's demands?

Gershon Baskin provided some interesting perspective when he spoke to us on Tuesday.

By Teymoor Nabili in Middle East on October 18th, 2011
The Israeli government may be planning to build a new Jewish neighborhood in Jerusalem [EPA]

On the Al Jazeera Newshour today, I spoke to Israeli spokesman Mark Regev. Mostly we discussed the prisoner exchange, but I also asked him whether the possibility of any further peace talks may have been compromised by talk of a new settlement in Jerusalem.


I was referring to the widely covered story that Israel was planning a major new expansion of settlements in Jerusalem.

By Teymoor Nabili in Middle East on August 4th, 2011
EPA photo

The deputy speaker of Israel's parliament, Danny Danon, appeared on my radar only recently, after he co-sponsored the country's recent "Boycott Bill", a piece of legislation that was widely attacked as anti-democratic both at home and by Israel's traditional supporters in the US.

Danon was, and is, unapologetic about his action, calling critics "hypocrites" and seeing no problem in a law that rides roughshod over one of the bedrock principles of justice - the presumption of innocence.

Since Danon is supported by some as a possible future prime minister of Israel

By Teymoor Nabili in Middle East on August 4th, 2011
Fayyad speaks during issuance of the first corporate Palestinian bonds [Reuters]

Two years ago, the prime minister of the Palestinian Authority set himself a deadline. Salam Fayyad said that by August 2011 he would have in place the institutions and offices that would support an independent state of Palestine. Even if the practical operation of such a state continued to be made impossible by Israel, he felt, establishing his own "facts on the ground" would be a major step towards concluding the conflict in former mandate Palestine.

Well those two years are now up, so I travelled to Ramallah last week to ask the PM what progress he had made towards his aim. Surprisingly he told me, “job done”.

In Brussels recently, he said, the World Bank and the IMF both gave their blessings to his work, issuing what he called a "birth certificate" to the new state.