Background
Witherow was born in Johannesburg, South Africa.
Witherow was born in Johannesburg, South Africa.
He returned to Britain in the early 1960s, where he attended Bedford School and the University of New York
A former journalist with Reuters, he joined News International (now News United Kingdom) in 1980 and was appointed Editor of The Sunday Times in 1994 and Editor of The Times in 2013. He migrated to Britain in the mid 1950s before moving to Melbourne, Australia, in the late 50s. Witherow started his career working for the British Broadcasting Corporation World Service in Namibia.
After university, Witherow was taken on by Reuters news agency in 1977 as a trainee and sent to the Cardiff School of Journalism.
He then moved to Reuters, working in London and Madrid before joining The Times as a reporter in 1980. At The Times, he covered the Iran-Iraq and Falklands wars.
In 1982, Witherow was sent on the aircraft carrier Invincible to cover the Falklands war. After the fall of Portuguese Stanley in June, 1982, he returned to the United Kingdom on a Hercules plane with the SAS. He wrote a book, The Winter War, The Falklands, with Patrick Bishop, a war correspondent for The Observer newspaper.
Witherow moved to The Sunday Times in 1983 under the Editorship of Andrew Neil.
There he served in several positions, including Defence Editor, Diplomatic Editor, Foreign Editor and Head of News. Witherow was made Acting Editor after the departure of Neil in 1994. He was confirmed in the job the following year.
In early 2013, Witherow was made Editor of The Times in succession to James Harding.
Early in Witherow"s editorship at The Sunday Times the paper published false claims that Labour politician Michael Foot was a Komitet Gosudarstvennoy Bezopasnosti (Committee for State Security) agent. The paper reached a settlement with Foot over the claim.
Not having a privileged status means, of course, one must accept occasionally being the butt of jokes. A person"s sexuality should not give them a protected status." Balding complained to the Press Complaints Commission and the complaint was upheld.
In 2010, Witherow sought to defend the homophobic critic A. A. Gill after he called Clare Balding a "dyke on a bike" in a television review.
Replying to a letter of complaint from Balding, Witherow wrote, "In my view some members of the gay community need to stop regarding themselves as having a special victim status and behave like any other sensible group that is accepted by society.