Mark MacKinnon
StaffCorrespondentSenior International CorrespondentLondon, U.K.

Area of Expertise

International relations, Canada’s role in the world

Mark MacKinnon has been covering international affairs and Canada’s role in the world since the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on the United States and the subsequent war in Afghanistan.

Since that moment, he has covered elections and wars, revolutions, and refugee crises, in all corners of the world.

One of Canada’s most decorated foreign correspondents, Mark has won the National Newspaper Award 10 times, in addition to being named Canada's print Journalist of the Year by the organization in 2016. In 2026, he was recognized with the Career Achievement Award by World Press Freedom Canada, which noted the many personal risks Mark had taken to bring international news to Canadian readers.

Mark has been covering Russia and Ukraine since 2002, when he was first sent abroad to serve as The Globe and Mail’s Moscow bureau chief. He covered the Orange Revolution in 2004 and Ukraine’s 2014 Revolution of Dignity, and witnessed firsthand Russia’s subsequent annexation of Crimea as well as the start of the eight-year proxy war in Donbas.

He has been covering Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine since its first days in February 2022.

Mark has also been internationally recognized for his war reporting. His 2016 story "The Graffiti Kids," which followed the lives of the teenagers who inadvertently started the Syrian war, was named Story of the Year by the London-based Foreign Press Association. He won the same FPA prize again in 2024 for his feature story "The Fearless," which followed a team of Ukrainian special-forces fighters through three years of war.

Mark has also been posted to the Middle East and China for The Globe and Mail. He reported on the 2013 transition of power in China from Hu Jintao to Xi Jinping, and has won accolades for his investigations into the garment industry in Asia, and for his reporting from the 2011 tsunami and nuclear disaster in Japan.

Mark is the author of The New Cold War: Revolutions, Rigged Elections and Pipeline Politics, which was published in 2007 by Random House, and The China Diaries, an e-book of his train travels through the Middle Kingdom along with photographer John Lehmann.

Mark has interviewed many world leaders, including Volodymyr Zelensky, Shimon Peres, Aung San Suu Kyi, and Jordan’s King Abdullah II.

Why did you become a journalist?

I started out wanting to witness history. Now I strive to make sure others don't look away.

30

Years in Journalism

28

Years at The Globe and Mail

Education

Bachelor of Journalism, Carleton University, 1997

Honours & Awards

Career Achievement Award, World Press Freedom Canada, 2025

National Newspaper Award, International Reporting, for coverage of the challenges facing post-civil war Syria, 2025

National Newspaper Award, Investigations, for coverage of the Alberta Health Care scandal (with Carrie Tait, Tom Cardoso, Stephanie Chambers and Alanna Smith), 2025

Story of the Year for "The Fearless," Foreign Press Association (UK), 2024

National Newspaper Award, International Reporting, for coverage of the war in Ukraine, 2024

National Newspaper Award, International Reporting, for stories about the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan, 2021

Story of the Year for "The Graffiti Kids Who Sparked the Syrian War," Foreign Press Association (UK), 2017

Journalist of the Year, National Newspaper Awards, 2016

National Newspaper Award, International Reporting, for coverage of the Syrian refugee crisis and its fallout, 2016

National Newspaper Award, International Reporting, for coverage of the conflict between Russia and Ukraine, 2014

National Newspaper Award, Breaking News, for coverage of the tsunami and nuclear disaster in Japan, 2011

National Newspaper Award, Business Reporting, for coverage of the Sino-Forest scandal (with Andy Hoffman), 2011

National Newspaper Award, Short Features, for a story about life, love, and war in a leper colony in Iraq, 2003

National Newspaper Award, Business Reporting, as part of a team that exposed insider trading on Canadian stock exchanges, 1999

Languages spoken

English, French, Russian, conversational Arabic and Chinese (putonghua). Working on Ukrainian.

Mark MacKinnon abides by The Globe and Mail Editorial Code of Conduct

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