Media
South African journalists excel at CNN awards
The
Mohamed Amin Photographic Award went to @hermanverwey, Beeld #AfricanJournoAwards #AJA20 pic.twitter.com/AlmXQO5lw8
—
AfricanJournoAwards (@AfricanJourno) October 10,
2015
Photographer Herman Verwey from the
Beeld newspaper won the
Mohamed Amin Photographic Award for his photos taken during the murder trial of
the Paralympic athlete, Oscar Pistorius.
"When you look at Herman Verwey's work, for a second, you can wonder… the
characters are so full of life, these pictures really give you a sense of their feelings.
Herman’s body of work gives also a proper idea of the high pressure that
surrounded this trial, so important for the South African society,” said the judges of
their choice of this year's winner.
The awards were handed out on Saturday evening, 10 October.
The Dow
Technology & Innovation Reporting Award went to @sarahemilywild, Mail &
Guardian #AfricanJournoAwards #AJA20 pic.twitter.com/PEFadJx44N
—
AfricanJournoAwards (@AfricanJourno) October 10,
2015
Sarah Wild from the Mail & Guardian newspaper won the
Technology & Innovation Reporting Award for her story, "Robot", on the
environmental testing of the health of the oceans' "lungs" in relation to effects of
global warming.
Judges highlighted the article's intuitive and simple tone in communicating the
technicalities of the subject matter, saying: "Sarah Wild delivered an original report
on a major innovation in research over global warming, conducted by a South
African scientific team. It's an excellent reminder that there are African-led
research programs at the forefront of the climate change issue. Sarah Wild
transports the reader into the heart of the
project, with the team deploying this new
generation of sea-cruising robots."
The IPP
Media Features Award went to @JulieLaurenz & #JacquelineJayamaha #AfricanJournoAwards #AJA20 pic.twitter.com/mrnV3LJXxT
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AfricanJournoAwards (@AfricanJourno) October 10,
2015
Freelance documentary-makers Julie Laurenz and Jacqueline Jayamaha won in
the Features Award category for their harrowing profile piece, "Viola's Hope", for
the e-tv channel,
about the effects of woonga drug addiction.
"Tragic. Educative. Committed. The team that brought us this piece spent over
a month putting it together and they stayed with their story which was well-shot,
produced and written," said the judges.
CNN/MultiChoice African Journalist 2015 is Hyacinthe Sanou, Burkina Faso
#AfricanJournoAwards #AJA20 w/ @UKenyatta pic.twitter.com/NYCfaWaXPO
—
DStv Kenya (@DStv_Kenya) October 10,
2015
Burkinabé journalist Hyacinthe Boowurosigue Sanou won the top prize – African
Journalist of the Year – for his piece, "Room 143". Published in the Ouagadougou
daily newspaper L’Observateur Paalga, the story covered the ousting
of Blaise Campaore, who had ruled over Burkina Faso for 27 years.
"My story was about power and how people can fight against it – I'm so proud
that the story has been told and will now be remembered," said Sanou.
Uhuru's
speech during 2015 CNN Multichoice African Journalist Awards http://t.co/KtM6nB6thX #AfricanJournoAwards pic.twitter.com/4uXdfz0Wvr
— The
Star, Kenya (@TheStarKenya) October 11,
2015
Keynote
speaker for the event, Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta, paid tribute
to the hard work journalists did to find the real stories of Africa. He asked that they
do their best to continue to find the real "African truths" and reclaim the African
story, so that they could tell global audiences of the success stories.
Ferial Haffajee, editor-in-chief of City Press newspaper, was this
year's chairperson of the judging panel. She paid tribute to the winners, saying the
awards were recognition for a lot of sacrifices that journalists made to get their
stories. "Journalism can be very dangerous, lonely," Haffajee told the gathering.
Speaking on behalf of the hosts and sponsors of the event, Deborah Rayner,
CNN senior vice-president for international news gathering, TV and digital, said that
the winners demonstrated the very best of journalism, from investigative journalism
through to stories of hope and change.
"I've seen tremendously courageous
reporting, brilliantly innovative reporting
and highly entertaining reporting," added Tony Maddox, executive vice-president
and managing director of CNN. "The awards really do cover the full panorama of all
that is good in journalism."
Source: News24
