Henry Chu
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Henry Chu first joined the Los Angeles Times in 1990 and worked primarily out of the San Fernando Valley office before moving to the foreign staff in 1998. He served as bureau chief in Beijing from 1998 to 2003, Rio de Janeiro from 2004 to 2005, New Delhi from 2006 to 2008 and London from 2009 to 2014. He was a 2014-15 fellow at the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard. From 2016-19 he was international editor at Variety magazine. A graduate of Harvard University, Chu returned to The Times in March 2020 as deputy news editor based in London. He left in 2024.
Latest From This Author
Pope Francis, whose warm, humble, no-nonsense manner galvanized the Roman Catholic Church and drew widespread admiration from outsiders, has died.
A possibly protracted — and broadened — Middle East conflict looms as Israel and Hamas militants trade fire, leaving hundreds dead on both sides.
Anna Laura Costa Porsborg came to Los Angeles last Christmas Eve for a weeklong vacation. Authorities do not believe she ever left. Her remains, they suspect, are somewhere in the Angeles National Forest.
Benedict XVI, the former pope who upended centuries of tradition by resigning as pontiff, has died at 95.
Barring tragedy or revolution, Britain is set to have a man instead of a woman on the throne for the next 75 years at least.
Desde Winston Churchill hasta Boris Johnson, la reina Isabel II vio entrar y salir a más de una docena de primeros ministros durante su reinado sin precedentes.
Queen Elizabeth II’s 70-year reign was so long that most of Britain’s 68 million people have known no other sovereign.
Rafael Nadal kept his Grand Slam dream alive with a Wimbledon quarterfinal win over Taylor Fritz on Wednesday. Despite an abdominal injury, he advanced to play Nick Kyrgios.
The cleric supported striking workers against Brazil’s military regime and was at one time a strong candidate to become the first Latin American pope.