Ira Mathur is an Indian born Caribbean freelance journalist/writer working in radio, television and print in Trinidad, West Indies.


Ira is currently a Sunday Guardian columnist and feature writer.

This website represents the diary of a woman and a twin-island nation in the new world.

I was born in an army hospital Guwahati in Northeastern India to a Muslim mother Anvar Zia Sultana, whose father was from Bhopal and mother from Savanur. My father, Mahendra Nath Mathur, is from Aligarh

I am the middle child. My brother Varun was older and my sister Rashmi is younger. 

As the children of an army officer, my brother and I moved all over India with our parents - from Simla, where I saw my first snowfall, to Chandigarh in Punjab to Bangalore.

The big surprise came when my father left the army after he had a heart attack at forty and announced he had found a job as an engineer to build the first highway in Tobago – the Claude Noel Highway. We lived on the fort near the Museum, and it didn't take us long to lose our Indian accents get a Tobago twang go-cart down the hill, pick guavas from the patch and make friends for life. 

At fourteen, my father took me briefly to School in England after which he sent me at 17 to Trent University in Canada—followed by another stint in London where I studied international Journalism.

 In London, I worked for a news agency – Gemini, whose editor, Daniel Nelson was passionate about uncovering stories from the developing world, and there I believe my ideology was set – to give the voiceless a voice.

 I came home in 1990 when I met and married my husband, Imshah Mohammed, and began my career in journalism. I plunged deep in almost right away with my coverage of the coup attempt for the BBC while working for the state-owned NBS Radio 610. 

I joined CCN TV6 after that when my beloved, brilliant late editor Raoul Pantin sent me all over Trinidad with a heavy tripod, (even while I was pregnant) to Laventille hot spots, and with police to drug busts, to cover prostitutes and poets. He told me the job of a journalist was to mirror our people, and I found much beauty amidst the sadness and crime.

What I never forget from the editors who most shaped me was to remain a voice for the voiceless. Here I found a real vocation since the power of media is such that if you shed light on a situation – on domestic violence victims, children with AIDs, victims of gun and drug violence, people step forward to help.  

I am married to Imshah Mohammed two children Kiran Mathur Mohammed, an economist and banker who has developed a start-up ap, and a daughter, Anika Mathur Mohammed, a lawyer who lives in London.

In recent years I was able to concentrate on one of my parallel loves, books and writing, and the tab Ira’s Room is devoted to writing and writers. I hope you stay with me on my journey as we get to know one another.

Contact Ira