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Rosa Meneses has been a staff reporter at the Spanish leading newspaper "El Mundo" from 1999 to 2024. Her focus is Maghreb and Middle East, and has been covering war and post-conflict transitions, humanitarian crisis, Human Rights and political Islam issues.
She has received the Communication Prize 2022, awarded by the Regional Government of Madrid for her defence of Women's Rights in Middle East.
She is Human Rights Journalism Prize 2016 for her coverage on refugees exodus in "El Mundo" by the Spanish Association for Human Rights. She is Spain's National Prize on New Journalism 2010.
She is Ochberg Fellow at the Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma, Columbia University's Journalism School, New York. As part of this network of reporters, she works to raise awareness on the safety issues faced by journalists reporting from war zones and the psychological impact of covering conflicts and humanitarian tragedies.
Compromised with building bridges between communities and cultures, she is member of the University Board of the Institute for Human Rights, Democracy and Peace (DEMOSPAZ), at the Autónoma University of Madrid and part of the Advisory Board at CEIPAZ.
She has been member of the Board of Directors of Reporters Without Borders-Spain (2014-2020) and vicepresident of the International Council of Reporters Without Borders-International, raising awareness on freedom of information around the world.
On January 2015, she covered the terrorist attacks in Paris against 'Charlie Hebdo' magazine and a kosher supermarket.
Since the beginning of the Arab Uprising, in 2011, she has been covering the events writing mainly from Tunisia and the war-torn Libya, Syria and Irak. On April 2011, she was shot while reporting from Misurata (Libya) and she survived as she was wearing a flack jacket borrowed by her colleagues from the British TV Channel Four.
Previously, she covered the war in Lebanon, in the summer of 2006.
She writes, analyses and reports regularly about political, military and social issues (terrorist attacks, social unrest, human rights, general elections, the boom of islamist movements, peace processes, humanitarian crisis) and during the last 25 years she has covered events in more than 20 countries of MENA region, specially Algeria, Morocco, Western Sahara, Tunisia, Libya, Syria, Egypt, Sudan, Yemen, Iraq, Iran, Lebanon, Jordan, the Gulf countries and Turkey.
She is BA in Journalism and has Graduate Studies in 'International News and the Global South' at Complutense University of Madrid. She has a diploma on Foreign Relations by the Diplomatic School (Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Spain).