The
cost will be covered by organizers of the Awards, the Pan African Climate Justice
Alliance (PACJA) and partners.
The
winners include Patrick Mayoyo from Kenya, Arison Tamfu from Cameroon and Kofi
Adu Domfeh from Ghana.
These
are among five African journalists declared winners of the 2nd ACCER
Awards held in Nairobi, Kenya on the sidelines of the ongoing United Nations
Environmental Assembly (UNEA).
Diane
Nininahazwe of Burundi Radio Ijwi ry'amahoro was the overall winner in the
radio category in French while Kofi Adu Domfeh of Luv Fm in Ghana won in the
radio category in English. Arison Tamfu from Cameroon was the overall winner in
the print category while Patrick Mayoyo won in the online category and in the
television category Zeynab Wandati emerged the overall winner.
The
runners-up in the print category were Greg Odogwu from Nigeria and Bob Koigi
from Kenya while in the Radio category the runners up were Wambi Michael from
Uganda and Jacob Safari from Kenya. In the online category, the runners up were
Violet Nakamba from Zambia and Busani Bafana from Zimbabwe.
Other
runners up were Rose Wangui from Kenya and Noela Luka from Kenya in TV category
while Didier Hubert Madafime from Benin and Gabriel Adonou from Togo emerged
runners up in the radio category in French.
All
winners, out of the 309 entries, received cash prizes, trophies and
certificates.
The
entries were audited and judged by a panel of seven judges headed by Dr.
Barrack Muluka, who at the Gala Night appealed to PACJA to partner with Media
organizations, learning institutions and experts to improve the level of
writing and communication skills amongst African journalists on climate change
and environment.
PACJA
secretary general Mithika Mwenda said the Alliance will continue to play a
major role in nurturing innovative ideas necessary to effectively confront the
main challenges of 21st century.
“These
complex challenges such as climate change will require collaboration from
various stakeholders to defeat and that is the spirit the ACCER Awards
exemplifies,” he said.
Mithika
said the ACCER Awards partnership strengthens the trust between the civil
society and the governments in Africa.
“Indeed,
this resonates with the UN call for collaboration to defeat the challenges of
climate change,” he added.
African
countries remain the greenest on earth yet vulnerable to climate change caused
by emissions of developed countries.
Whilst
countries in Africa look at the challenges posed by climate change of
socio-economic development, the United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP)
says it would also be necessary for the continent to explore opportunities
therein.
UNEP’s
Director of the Africa Regional Office, Mounkaila Goumandakoye, is emphatic on
renewable energy as an area to explore.
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