Ghana’s Kofi Adu Domfeh is among fifteen African journalists
shortlisted for the 2014 African
Climate Change and Environmental Reporting (ACCER) Awards.
The
announcement was made at an event in Nairobi, Kenya on World Environment Day.
The
competition is an initiative of the Pan African Climate Justice Alliance
(PACJA), the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), Oxfam and other
partners.
UNEP’s
Ms. Angele Luh, a member of the Award Jury Team of the 2014 ACCER Awards who
announced the finalists noted that “the standards of written expression were
sometimes worrying”.
According
to her, some of the entrants need training in basic writing skills and also need
to embrace the basic rhythms of disciplined thinking and controlled writing.
“Their
predicament is easily compounded by having to address a technical subject like
climate change. Proper training for such journalists would do well to combine
both the substance of reporting the environment and journalistic skills
generally,” she recommended.
The
ACCER Awards is to recognize journalists from across Africa that have,through
their reporting, contributed to the understanding and conceptualization of
climate change and environment as broader issue affecting development efforts.
“This
second edition has attracted a lot of interest, with 309 entries received from
across Africa compared to last year’s 110 entries” said Dr. Joseph Kiyimba, PACJA
Communication Manager. “This event marks
the end of a four-month process of
collection, collation, judging and identification of recipients of the Awards,
to recognize the outstanding climate change and environmental journalists
across Africa who have scooped various Awards in this vigorous competition.”
The
finalists drawn from print, radio, television and multimedia, include Zeynab
Wandati, Bob Koigi, Rose Wangui, Noala Luka, Jacob Safari and Patrick Mayoyo,
all from Kenya.
Others
are Greg Odogwu, Nigeria; Arison Tamfu, Cameroon; Kofi Adu Domfeh, Ghana;
Violate Mengo, Zambia; Michael Wambi, Uganda and Busani Bafana, Zimbabwe. The rest
of the nominees are Diane Nininahazwe, Burundi; Didier Hubert Madafime, Benin;
and Gabriel Adonou, Togo.
Domfeh, who works with Luv Fm in Kumasi – a
radio station owned by the Multimedia Group Limited – was runner-up in the maiden
edition of the Awards last year.
PACJA
co-Chair, Dr. Habtemariam Abate said that the ACCER Awards is in line with
PACJA strategic objectives of building the capacity of African journalists
which gave birth to African Media Alliance for Climate Change (PAMACC).
He
stated that PACJA will later this year commence The ACCER Awards Finalists
Academy (TAAFA).
Kenya’s Principal Secretary in the Ministry
of Environment, Water and Natural Resources, Dr. Richard Lesiyampe in a
statement said “we hope that the ACCER Awards will help to build an enhanced
African profile that assures the continent’s visibility in international
climate change dialogue processes”.
The
climax of the Awards competition will be a Gala Night on June 25, 2014 at the
sidelines of the UN Environment Assembly which takes place on June 23-27 in
Nairobi.
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