When journalist Yalda Hakim lands in a country, she heads straight to a hair salon for a blow-dry. She might be in Libya, Iraq or Afghanistan and she could be there to tell the story of some of the worldโs most vulnerable people, or even interview a president. Yaldaโs not concerned with her hair though. Instead, the salon is an opportunity to get close to local women.
โI get my hair done, theyโre getting their hair done, they take off their head scarves and I suddenly see whatโs going on under the scarves โ peroxided blonde hair and incredible dazzling outfits,โ she says. โThen they talk about everything from how theyโre dealing with motherhood to marriage, but also politics and their place in society and whatโs going on, and the struggles and challenges they face. That helps me tap into something that my male colleagues just could never, ever do.โ
Itโs savvy strategies like this โ and the ability to speak six languages โ which have set the 33-year-old Australian journalist apart and, together with a relentless drive and energy, have earned her global television success and many fans. In recent years, Yalda has travelled to South Sudan, Afghanistan, Mexico, Ghana, Sweden and Indonesia. Working for BBC World News since 2013, Yalda lives in London, where she hosts Impact, a daily rolling news program. When sheโs not in the studio, Yalda is travelling the world, reporting and producing six documentaries a year, as part of the Our World series.
โWorking for the BBC, I think itโs one of the few places now where there is a platform for me to be able to pick off a map a place that we want to go, a story thatโs not told,โ Yalda says.
With her deliberate strategy to โfind a point of differenceโ and access women wherever she goes, Yalda believes she is often underestimated and uses that to her advantage to tell her stories.
โI feel like I can do my job better because I am a woman. I am the โthird genderโ in some places that I go to,โ she says. โThey donโt recognise me โ Iโm not one of their women, Iโm not a man, Iโm a third gender โ and sometimes they wonโt even look at me in the room.โ
โInitially, I remember being offended and thinking Iโm invisible in this room; they just want to talk to the men,โ she says. โBut actually it gave me access to the women. It opened doors. They had their guard down, sort of thinking โ well, sheโs petite and how much harm can she do? But actually that helped me tap into something.โ
Yaldaโs own story is remarkable. Born in Afghanistan in 1983, the third of four children to Zabrina and Wali Hakim. The family fled Kabul on horseback after the Soviet Union invaded and her father faced conscription. After two years in a refugee camp in Pakistan, her family felt โincredibly blessedโ when it was sponsored to Australia, arriving here when Yalda was three years old.
โI look very fondly on the journey of my parents, as do they, in Australia,โ says Yalda. โI feel I am a product of this country and the opportunities Iโve received. Itโs my Australian training and who I am as an Australian, and my work ethic, thatโs been able to be embraced by the BBC.โ

TV journalist Yalda Hakim was a six-month-old baby strapped to her motherโs back when her family fled Afghanistan on their long return to her homeland at the age of 25 for an emotional reunion with her grandparents.
Life in detention
When the Hakims came to Australia in 1986, they stayed at the Villawood Migrant Hostel in Sydney and were provided with services such as English lessons to help them assimilate.
โFor me to now look at that place and itโs a detention centre, you sort of think in 30 years so much has changed,โ says Yalda. โAttitudes have hardened. Sometimes when I look at the situation, I just think itโs not the Australia I know, itโs not the country I was raised in.โ
When you meet Yalda Hakim, youโre struck by her size โ sheโs diminutive.You also immediately notice her eyes, a hypnotic mix of hazel and amber. Itโs hard not to stare. At The Weeklyโs photo shoot, Yalda admits she is operating on just two-and-a-half hoursโ sleep.
Her trip back to Australia is a combination of work and family time. The night before our shoot, she realised she hadnโt completed the judging for a film competition. Itโs an oversight thatโs kept her up until 4am. Now itโs 8.30am and Yalda is in the chair for hair and make-up โ bright and cheery with a fresh face, chatting to everyone about everything from the difficulties of finding good coffee in London to the struggle of child slavery in fishing villages in Ghana. After every wardrobe change, Yalda peeks at the stunning photos, trying to choose a favourite for her family. โIโd really like a picture for my mum,โ she says.
Yalda first came to the attention of Australian viewers while at SBS, where she co-hosted and reported for Dateline. Growing up in Sydney, she began writing for her local paper at just 15, work experience followed at local radio stations and TV networks Nine and Ten. She even worked at SBS for a year for free while finishing her degree.
โI just wanted to be in the space where I was learning as much as I could,โ Yalda explains. โI was willing to do anything.โ
A cadetship with SBS News followed and Yalda taught herself to use a camera and edit. To convince her bosses that she had what it takes to be a foreign correspondent, at just 24, she used her holidays to travel to India and Afghanistan to shoot her own stories. They were to be the first of many overseas stories and the beginning of a reporting career that continues to take her all over the globe.
Clear vision
Her success is no surprise to her younger sister, Mariam โMazโ Hakim. Growing up, she always knew Yalda had the โX factorโ and was destined for journalism. โShe knew from a very young age exactly what she wanted to do,โ says Maz. โShe used to draw pictures when she was eight or nine years old, look at the TV and tell me, โIโm going to be one of those journalistsโ.โ
Success in the media runs in the Hakim family. Maz works for Virgin Radio in Dubai and hosts her own national program. The 30-year-old says that her parentsโ story of leaving Afghanistan resonated with all of them, but especially Yalda.
โSheโs kind of gone full circle in that she now gets to tell the story and experiences of what other people go through in todayโs society when they are refugees or migrants,โ says Maz.
โMy dad used to tell us all the time to dream big and there is nothing that can limit you โ aim for the sky. I think itโs incredibly important for migrant families, for the parents to push their daughters to progress and move into an industry they want to, rather than just an industry their parents think is suitable for them.โ
The sisters may live in different countries, but theyโre obviously close. Yalda will tell Maz where she is going on her reporting trips โ but she keeps it from her parents, so as not to worry them.
โMy mother is a big worrywart just like most mums are,โ says Maz. โMy dadโs very supportive, but still also worries.โ
The other person Yalda always tells where she is going is husband of eight years, Abed Rashid. Theirs isnโt a traditional relationship; he remained in Australia for a year when Yalda first moved to London. โI needed him to come [to London] when he felt it was right, rather than just move over for me,โ she explains. Now, Abed lives in Oxford, where he is an avionics engineer, and Yalda is in London. The 35-year-old former RAAF sergeant usually sees his wife about every four days. If Yalda is on assignment, the couple can spend up to two months apart due to her remote and sometimes dangerous story locations.
โWhen we got together, my career hadnโt kicked off,โ says Yalda. โI was working in the industry, but finding my place. He was very much within the Air Force and travelling a lot. A day after we got together, he disappeared for three months.โ
โI had to very much get used to that and be supportive of what he did. So when the roles reversed, he was incredibly supportive. I would describe him in many ways as a feminist. He enjoys seeing what I do.โ
โA lot of people ask him how he deals with me going to dangerous places and disappearing for weeks on end, sometimes without making any communication or contact with him, and he sort of says, โWell I did the same thing. Why should it be any different if she is doing it?'โ
Looking at her own parentsโ marriage, Yalda sees many parallels with her own. Her father left Afghanistan for seven years, living in what was then Czechoslovakia, to continue his architecture studies. Her mother worked as a midwife in both Afghanistan and Pakistan, travelling into remote villages to assist women who could not access hospitals to give birth. โBecause they had always had a long-distance relationship with four kids, I donโt think they find our choices bizarre,โ Yalda says. โI think itโs kind of the challenge of modern- day relationships โ there are no rules. People just do what works for them in that relationship and I think thatโs important and healthy.
โLast year, I left London for eight weeks and I was travelling across Asia, and I came to Australia, then travelled to South Sudan to film another story. Perhaps if we had children the dynamics would change โ that I couldnโt disappear for eight weeks because there would be someone else whoโs dependent on me,โ she says.
Itโs with some frustration that Yalda deals with the question of children, admitting it โplays in the backโ of her mind. She says no one at the BBC has asked her whether she plans to have children, but describes it as โshamefulโ that, in 2017, young women are made to feel worried and stressed about the decision.
โEventually, Iโd like to think about having children and I hope that for the generation 10 years younger than me or younger, itโs not something that worries them,โ she says.
โWomen who have built a career and enjoy their work, you do think the whole notion of having it all is actually false. Itโs a false pressure thatโs put on women that we need to somehow make everything work. Itโs about actually figuring out what works for you and your life.โ
When she gets back to Australia, Yalda likes to stay home. โI sit on Mumโs couch,โ she says. โAll she wants to do is look after me.โ
Which is hardly surprising, given that Yalda spends so much time in some of the worldโs most dangerous countries. Trips to Afghanistan โ the country of her birth โ have been particularly eye-opening for the reporter. She realised her fate could have been very different when she reported for Dateline on drug-addicted women and babies being treated in a rehabilitation centre there. โI was confronted by the things I saw and the difference in their life to mine, the freedoms that I had,โ she says. โIt absolutely made me think and sort of look at some of those women, and feel like I was looking at a reflection of myself, but worlds apart.โ

โI was looking at a reflection of myself, but worlds apart.โ
Yalda freely admits that she can get too close to her stories and she struggles with work/life balance. Yet she canโt imagine doing anything else.
โThe dominant factor in my life, above and beyond anything, remains my career and perhaps that is something that I need to work on,โ she admits. โI still canโt find the balance.
โYou need a very supportive network of people around you to understand that youโre not going to make that dinner. That you will unfortunately choose the job and the trip, and what you have to do, over whatโs been planned for weeks,โ Yalda says.
โThe day that I become desensitised and the day that I stop caring about the stories that I do, I need to stop, I need to move on and do something else. I can see a lot of bad things, but that doesnโt mean that it doesnโt impact me in some way. It just drives me. It drives me to go back each time.โ
This article originally appeared in the February 2017 edition of The Australian Womenโs Weekly.