James Mates (born 1964) is a British newsreader and journalist.
Mates is currently employed by ITN where he presents on ITV News whilst also being senior correspondent.
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James Mates is the son of Conservative party politician Michael Mates. He currently lives in London with his wife Fiona and three children (Leo, Flora, and Charles.) They married in May 1991.
Mates was educated at Marlborough College, an independent school in the market town of Marlborough in Wiltshire, where his children now attend. Mates left Marlborough at the age of 16 to take A levels at Farnham College in Farnham in Surrey and then studied at he University of Leeds from which he graduated, in 1983, with an Honours degree in International History and Politics. During that time he had spent his 1981 summer vacation working as a researcher for John Tower on the Senate Armed Services Committee.
Mates joined ITN in 1983 as an editorial trainee and was appointed scriptwriter in the ITV newsroom two years later. He was made a general reporter at ITN in 1986.
Amongst his first assignments on becoming a reporter was to cover the Zeebrugge ferry disaster. He spent five weeks in Zeebrugge in 1987 during the operation to raise the capsized ferry 'Herald of Free Enterprise'. Another major assignment was to cover the UK's failed extradition attempt from Ireland of Father Patrick Ryan in 1989. The failure was attributed to prejudicial comments made in parliament by his father, Michael Mates, which implied that Ryan was a terrorist. Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher, compounded the damage done by Mates' comments at PMQs on 29 November 1988.[1] In October 1989, the Irish government refused the extradition request on the grounds that Ryan would not get a fair trial in Britain.[2]
In 1989 he was made Tokyo correspondent of the World News on Channel 4's first early morning service, Channel Four Daily. In 1991 Mates was North of England correspondent for ITV, and later that year became Moscow correspondent, a role he kept until 1993. During his time as Moscow correspondent one of James Mates' reports, on the use of ice as an anaesthetic in a Russian hospital, was awarded the Prix du Press Club de France at the 7th International Scoop & News Festival of Angers, France. The same story, together with a report on the Russian economy, won Mates a silver medal at the 35th Annual Film & Television Festival of New York. Between 1993 and 1996 Mates was ITN's Diplomatic Editor.
His many assignments have numbered Kosovo, where he was during the NATO invasion of the country; former Yugoslavia where he covered the 1996 refugee crisis; Moscow during President Yeltsin's attempt to put down the uprising in Chechnya; and Rwanda where he reported on the Central African Republic 's genocidal civil war. As the only television journalist left in the capital Kigali in 1994, Mates watched the city fall to the rebel army of the Rwandan Patriotic Front. He also reported on the slaughter of countless soldiers and civilians and the plight of the 700,000 refugees who fled the carnage. ITV News won a BAFTA for its coverage of the genocide.
He also won a joint Silver Medal from New York for his 1996 coverage of the refugee crisis in former Yugoslavia. Just before covering the war in Rwanda, Mates had been in South Africa reporting on the first-ever democratic elections in the country, which culminated in Nelson Mandela's inauguration as President.
Mates was Washington correspondent between 1997 and 2001. In 2001 he was awarded the title of "Senior Correspondent" for ITV News. In September 2001 Mates played a key role in ITV News coverage of the events of September 11th, reporting from New York.