Paul Cunningham (journalist)


Paul Cunningham is an Irish journalist and author. He is currently Political Correspondent for RTÉ News and Current Affairs. He has regularly reported on conflicts, natural disasters and other matters outside the EU. Most recently he reported from Iran, Ukraine and Iraq. He has won multiple awards for his work. Cunningham has also written two books, including Ireland's Burning.

Career

Early career

Cunningham started to write articles for local newspapers in Dublin, before freelancing with the Irish Times and Irish Press.
Quickly he began to pick up freelance shifts on RTÉ Radio 1 and RTÉ 2FM as a sub-editor and news-reader. After 2 years, he was appointed to the RTÉ Newsroom as a reporter.

Lindsay Tribunal

From 1999 to 2001, Paul Cunningham reported on the infection of Irish people with haemophilia, with HIV, and with Hepatitis C from contaminated blood products. In recognition, he won "National Radio Journalist of the Year" in the ESB National Media Awards in 2000. He followed this up with a documentary exposing the practices of US-based drug firms that exported infected blood products to Ireland. The programme, Bad Blood, won an Irish Film and Television Award. He co-wrote a book, with Rosemary Daly, on the impact of contaminated blood products called A Case of Bad Blood for Poolbeg Press.

Foreign Coverage

Cunningham has reported extensively from abroad. His first assignment was on the aftermath of the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989. He followed up with reports on numerous conflicts including Northern Ireland, Bosnia, Lebanon, Kosovo, Algeria, Pakistan/Afghanistan, Guatemala, Nepal, Darfur and Chad. He has also reported on flooding in Mozambique and New Orleans; racism in South Africa; and Chile post-dictatorship.

Presenter

Cunningham has been a stand-in radio news presenter over many years for programmes such as Morning Ireland, News At One and This Week. He is a regular presenter / editor of European Parliament Report. In 2007, he presented an edition of RTÉ's current affairs interview programme One to One, in which he interviewed award-winning journalist Seymour Hersh. In 2008, after Cunningham interviewed civil servant Padraig O hUiginn for the same series, Sunday Independent columnist Brendan O'Connor compared Cunningham to the hero in US television series Columbo: "seemingly awkward, nerdy and self-effacing and merely innocently asking odd questions, while all the time letting his subject reveal himself".

Environment Correspondent

As RTÉ's Environment Correspondent, between 2001 and 2010, Cunningham regularly reported on climate change. In October 2006, he reported and blogged on the melting of glaciers in Greenland for RTÉ. In 2008 Cunningham travelled to Chad to film a series of reports on the country for RTÉ. Cunningham covered the 2009 United Nations Climate Change Conference for RTÉ. He also reported from the UNFCCC meetings in Bali and Montreal
Cunningham is the author of the book Ireland's Burning, which was published in 2008. It features interviews with Irish people concerned about the environment, including weatherman Gerald Fleming, journalist Kevin Myers and Minister for the Environment, Heritage and Local Government John Gormley.

Documentary work

Cunningham has worked as a reporter and producer on several TV documentaries, apart from Bad Blood, including
Kidnapped: Sharon Commins' hostage ordeal in Darfur - 2010
Green Gold: Search for Ireland's Green Economy - 2010
Far Away - So Close: Conflict in Guatemala - 2008
Poptarts and Chemotherapy: Robbie Dillon's story - 1998
A Noble Failure: The Bosnian War and Irish efforts to help - 1994

Europe Correspondent

Cunningham has been RTÉ's Europe Correspondent, where most of the work focused on the Eurozone debt crisis. Other stories included
Arrest and detention of former Bosnian Serb Commander Ratko Mladic
20th anniversary of the siege of Sarajevo
Greek elections
Portuguese elections
Ireland at the helm of the OSCE / Visit to Georgia - Abkhazia
Horse meat contamination problems in Poland
Train crash at Santiago de Compostela
However, he also reports on matters beyond the EU. He covered the aftermath of the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami and resulting Fukushima I nuclear accidents in Japan for RTÉ. Most recently he broadcast a series of reports from Iran, as the provisional nuclear deal with the West came into operation.

Political Correspondent

He is currently Political Correspondent for RTÉ News and Current Affairs.

Hat

In January 2010 Cunningham became known for his choice of hat which, according to the journalist himself via Twitter, is from "Pakistan's tribal areas". He wore the hat during a live television news report for RTÉ outside Government Buildings during the January 2010 weather emergency in Europe. The hat has been described variously as a “woolly pancake”, an “Aran Smurf’s hat” and “stylish, in a French pastry kind of way”. A Facebook group dedicated to the hat had more than one thousand fans within hours of the hat's television debut. Observers noted that Cunningham's hat did indeed resemble a pakul, a traditional men's hat worn in the Chitral and Gilgit regions of Pakistan. Some of these fans met up outside Government Buildings wearing their own hats in a similar manner. RTÉ.ie even referenced the hat in their own weather updates. The hat was auctioned for GOAL on radio programme Mooney on January 21, 2010 to raise funds for the 2010 Haiti earthquake appeal: the hat was purchased after some "frenzied bidding" for €570 by a member of "We love Paul Cunningham's winter hat" Facebook society. Cunningham had responded after Derek Mooney said he would auction his own jumper on air.