Ayshah Tull is an award-winning reporter for Channel 4 News.
She joined the programme in 2019 and previously worked for BBC Newsround from 2013-2018.
Her broadcasting on the programme has included extensive coverage of the coronavirus crisis, and she has also led reports on the Black Lives Matter protests in the UK.
Ayshah reports on Channel 4 News’ weekly news show on Facebook ‘Uncovered’ covering untold stories from around the world. She also presents the Channel 4 News Instagram and Snapchat series, ‘Rated’.
In 2020 Ayshah won Journalist of the Year and the Grand Prize at The Drum Online Media Awards, the first time this has been awarded to an individual.
Newsreader Huw Edwards has resigned from the BBC. He has not been seen on screen since last summer when allegations emerged that he had paid a person for sexually explicit photographs. Edwards had long been a fixture in the corporation’s coverage of major political and royal events.
Russia has reacted with fury and has warned more in Ukraine will die after the US House of Representatives passed a military aid package worth more than $60 billion.
Imagine going on a family holiday and being told you have no right to return to the only place you have ever called home. That’s what happened to 70-year-old Richard Black, who went to Trinidad from the UK 40 years ago to visit his in-laws. He’s thought to be one of the earliest victims of…
Cowboys are among the most iconic figures of America’s old west. What’s less well known is that, in their heyday, an estimated one in four of them were Black.
Tom Wheatley is the President of the Prison Governors Association.
How many weapons do UK companies sell to Israel?
An estimated 2.5 million people are victims of stalking every year in England and Wales – but the number is believed to be much higher as many cases go unreported.
We spoke to the Conservative MP and former chancellor Nadhim Zahawi, who questioned Paula Vennells on the Horizon IT scandal when she gave evidence to a select committee in 2015.
We spoke to Arwa Damon, president and founder of INARA – a charity she set up almost a decade ago largely to provide care to children injured or traumatised by war.
One director with personal experience, Milad Alami, has made a new dramatic thriller detailing the story of an Iranian man and his family as they sought refuge in northern Sweden.
The UN secretary general Antonio Guterres has called the queue of aid-trucks waiting to be allowed into Gaza where people face starvation, ‘a moral outrage’. He was visiting the border crossing between Egypt and Gaza, not far from Rafah, where almost half of Gaza’s population have been displaced and where Israel is threatening to launch…
Pregnant women and new mothers who are convicted of most types of crime will be considered for reduced sentences.
The US State department has announced a charter flight to fly American citizens out of Haiti as gang violence grips the nation. The situation for ordinary people remains dangerous, with police in the capital Port-au-Prince currently trying to arrest gang leader Jimmy Cherizier, known as Barbecue. Last week the escalating violence forced the resignation of…
Earlier we spoke to Nina Khrushcheva, professor of International Affairs in The New School in New York and granddaughter of former Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev.
We are joined by Lord Simon Woolley, Principal of Homerton College Cambridge, and the founder of Operation Black Vote, which works to increase representation of Black people.