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Veteran journalist Mark Tully passes away

By IANS | Updated: January 25, 2026 17:10 IST

New Delhi, Jan 25 Veteran journalist, broadcaster, and author Sir William Mark Tully, or Mark Tully, whose voice ...

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New Delhi, Jan 25 Veteran journalist, broadcaster, and author Sir William Mark Tully, or Mark Tully, whose voice was one of the most famous in India throughout the latter decades of the 20th century as he reported on key political developments, passed away on Sunday. He was 90.

Tully, a former BBC journalist who covered India and South Asia throughout his career and was honoured by both the Indian and the British governments, was ailing for some time and was admitted to a south Delhi hospital, where he passed away.

Born in Tollygunge, Calcutta, on October 24, 1935, into a wealthy British businessman's family, Tully did his initial schooling in India, including a boarding school in Darjeeling, before returning to the UK at the age of nine. He studied theology at Cambridge and had planned a career in the church, but gave it up midway. He chose journalism instead, joining the BBC in 1964.

Tully moved back to India in 1965 to work as the BBC's India Correspondent. Soon becoming the service's chief of bureau, New Delhi, he, in his 22-year-long stint, covered all the major South Asian incidents during his tenure, ranging from the various India-Pakistan conflicts, Operation Blue Star, the subsequent assassination of Indira Gandhi, and the anti-Sikh riots, the Bhopal gas tragedy, the assassination of Rajiv Gandhi, and the Babri Masjid demolition.

Quitting the BBC in July 1994, after an argument with its then Director General, he worked as a freelance journalist and broadcaster based in New Delhi. However, his association with the BBC continued as he presented some programmes for it till 2019.

Tully was the author of various books as well. Beginning with "Amritsar: Mrs Gandhi's Last Battle" (1985), co-authored with his BBC colleague, Satish Jacob, he then co-authored "Raj to Rajiv: 40 Years of Indian Independence" (1988) with Zareer Masani, "No Full Stops in India" (1988), "India in Slow Motion" (2002), along with Gillian Wright, "India's Unending Journey" (2008), and "India: The Road Ahead" (2011).

"The Heart of India" (1995), covering vignettes of Indian life, and "Upcountry Tales: Once Upon A Time In The Heart Of India" (2017) were his fictional works.

Made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire in 1985, he was knighted in 2002. Conferred the Padma Shri in 1992, he received the Padma Bhushan in 2005.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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