
AU Media Fellowship Programme Aims At Promoting Africa's Agenda 2063
14 July 2022 14:56
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By Kestér Kenn Klomegâh
The African Union (AU) Information and Communication Directorate (ICD) in close partnership with GIZ (German Corporation for International Corporation) is implementing its first AU Media Fellowship programme within the framework of the AU-German Government initiative, the "Citizen Engagement and Innovative Data Use for Africa's Development (DataCipation)".
The
Fellowship Programme is one of the activities being undertaken by the
AU in line with the decision of the 2nd African Union Specialized
Technical Committee on Communication and Information Communication
Technologies (STCCICT) 2017, at which the Ministers resolved to promote
engagement with African journalists for their recognition of the
important role and tremendous contributions towards the achievement of
AU's Agenda 2063.
The
Fellowship Programme also aims at ensuring that Africa is at the
forefront of defining its own narrative and promoting the continents'
development framework Agenda 2063 to African and global audiences. It is
stratically designed to provide a unique platform for African
journalists and content producers to enhance their capacity to reframe
the African narrative and promote developmental journalism using new and
emerging technologies.
Following
the open invitation for the AU Media Fellowship in April 2022, over 800
applications from across Africa and the diaspora were recieved. After
careful scrutiny and sellection, 15 Fellows were chosen, based on
criteria of innovation and ability of their pitches to challenge harmful
stereotypical narratives and shape new and balanced discourse about the
continent, as the first cohort of AU Media Fellows.
The
AU Media Fellows 2022 are: Aissatou Fofana (Cote D’Ivoire); Amira Sayed
(Egypt) Areff Samir (South Africa); Johnson Kanamugire (Rwanda);
Jeanine Fankam (Cameroun); Osei Kwame (Ghana); Yasser Machat (Tunisia);
Rivonala Razafison (Madagascar); Cecelia Maundu (Kenya); Sally
Nyakanyanga (Zimbabwe); Sadou Alize Mouktar (Niger); Nila Yasmin Faisal
(Uganda); Severin Alega Mbele (Cameroun); Esther Namuhisa (Tanzania);
Carien Du Plessis (South Africa).
In
June 2022, the AU Media Fellows undertook a two-week study tour in
Germany starting with a training offered by the Deutsche Welle Academy
as well as attended the Global Media Forum in June in Bonn where they
had the opportunity to be the first ever largest representation of
African journalists from the continent at the forum and exchange views
with media professionals, decision-makers and influencers in politics,
education, culture, civil society, among others from across the world.
Phase
2 of the study tour will commence with a series of meetings to the
African Union Head Quarters in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia followed by visit
the the African Union Development Agency (AUDA- NEPAD) in South Africa.
Throughout the programme, the Fellows will receive mentorship support
from media industry experts Simon Allison - Editor in Chief of the
Continent, Natasha Kimani - Africa No Filter and Tulanana Bohela,
Co-Founder of Ona Stories.
Ms.
Leslie Richer, the African Union Director for Information and
Communication said that African journalists and content creators have a
key role to play in defining Africa's narrative and how we want
Africans and the world to view the continent. The AU Media Fellowship is
an investment in the human capital of African journalists and
storytellers to further develop their skills and help them maximise
their potential to contribute to the continent’s development.
"I
look forward to seeing the outcomes of this fellowship as a platform
for promoting Africa’s Agenda 2063 and telling a balanced story about
the realities of Africa's development and the opportunities for
promoting socio-economic solutions that are defined and driven by
Africans and benefit Africans in the digital age," she added.
On
his part, Franz von Weizsaecker, Head of Programme, Citizens Engagement
and Innovative Data Use for Africa Development (DataCipation) project,
reiterated German development cooperation is committed to supporting the
AU in improving citizen participation through digitalization.
He
noted that "digital technologies advance rapidly, and with them the
emergence of news, creation of knowledge and public discourse. Never
before has so much information been available so fast, to so many
people, practically everywhere. In order to make use of the
opportunities provided by digital transformation, we need to ensure
timely access to information on public-interest issues for citizens.
Only informed citizens will participate in democratic decision-making.
Information is a powerful instrument, and digital technologies function
as amplifiers. With our support to the African Union Media Fellowship,
we aim to amplify the positive potential and empower citizens."
The
African Union is a continental body consisting of the 55 member states
that make up the African Continent. The AU aims at accelerating the
process of integration in order to play its rightful role in the global
economy while addressing multifaceted social, economic and political
problems inside Africa. In order to ensure the realization of its
objectives, it has been collaborating within the strategic framework of
its Agenda 2063. [ ]
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AU Media Fellowship Programme Aims At Promoting Africa's Agenda 2063
By Kestér Kenn Klomegâh The African Union (AU) Information and Communication Directorate (ICD) in close partnership with GIZ (German Corporation for International Corporation) is implementing its first AU Media Fellowship programme w