NEW YORK:  Television host Hoda Kotb was named the new co-anchor of the NBC News "Today" show on Tuesday, replacing former co-host Matt Lauer several weeks after the longtime anchor was fired for inappropriate sexual behavior, according to a network statement. 

She is the first Arab-American media personality to hold such a high profile position in the international media. 

Kotb will join Savannah Guthrie during the first two hours of the popular program, starting at 7 a.m. EST (noon GMT), and become the first pair of women to host the show along with weatherman Al Roker and Orange Room host Carson Daly. Kotb will continue co-hosting the 10 a.m. hour of "Today" with Kathie Lee Gifford.

"It's 2018 and we are kicking off the year right because Hoda is officially the co-anchor of Today," said Guthrie, 46, who announced the news during the program's opening moments.

Kotb, 53, quickly filled in as co-host when Lauer was fired on Nov. 28 after a female colleague complained to NBC officials about a pattern of inappropriate sexual behavior that began while they were on assignment at the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics in Russia, according to the network.

At least two other women went to NBC with similar complaints against Lauer following the first allegation. None of the women has been publicly identified.

"Repairing the damage will take a lot of time and soul searching and I'm committed to beginning that effort," Lauer said after he was fired.

Reuters has not independently verified the accusations.

Kotb joined NBC News in 1998 as a correspondent and has co-hosted the fourth hour of "Today" with Gifford since 2008.

She also hosts a program on Sirius XM satellite radio.

"Over the past several weeks, Hoda has seamlessly stepped into the co-anchor role alongside Savannah, and the two have quickly hit the ground running," NBC News Chairman Andrew Lack said in an email to staff, according to Today.com.

According to the Arab American Institute, Hoda Kotb was born in a small Oklahoman town, though she considers herself a true West Virginian, having spent most of her childhood in Morgantown. She spent a large portion of her working life in Egypt.

After receiving a B.A. in broadcast journalism from Virginia Tech, Kotb took her first professional job as a CBS news assistant in Egypt, and lived for a year with her family in Cairo. Kotb

In 2007, Kotb revealed that she had been battling breast cancer, and underwent a mastectomy the same year. Kotb said cancer “gave [her] the gift of being fearless.