Abraji offers online course in data journalism [Brazil]

Image result for AbrajiJournalists interested in data journalism can enroll in this four-week course.
The Brazilian Association of Investigative Journalism (Abraji) will host a data journalism course starting Sept. 11. The online training will cover how to obtain relevant information from large public databases.
Participants will learn how to analyze databases published in full by Brazilian government agencies and publish stories based on this information.
Registration is open, but spots are limited. The cost is BRL120 for Abraji members and BRL150 for non-members.
For more information (in Portuguese), click here

BBC seeks field producer [Kenya]

Image result for The BBCExperienced journalists fluent in English can apply for this position.
The BBC is hiring a field editor to join its Africa service in Nairobi.
Responsibilities include suggesting and researching stories; finding contributors and interviewees as well as other sources of materials; reporting from the field as needed; and more.
Candidates must have basic skills of shooting photo and video, knowledge of issues relating to the region and developments in digital storytelling.
The deadline is Aug. 27.
For more information, click here.

Postgraduate scholarships in UK available [Worldwide]

Image result for Foreign and Commonwealth OfficeJournalists can apply for the Chevening Scholarship Program.
Chevening Scholarships are the global scholarship program funded by the U.K.'s Foreign and Commonwealth Office and partner organizations for outstanding scholars with leadership potential.
The scholarships are offered for many fields of study, including journalism and media. The program provides full or partial funding for full-time courses at the postgraduate level, normally a one-year master’s degree, in any subject and at any U.K. university.
Applicants must have an excellent undergraduate academic track record and two to five years of professional experience, in addition to being fluent in English.
The deadline is Nov. 7.
For more information, click here.

RESUME OR RESIGN: IPC CONDEMNS POLICE ATTACK ON JOURNALIST

Image result for IPC NIGERIAPress Release

RESUME OR RESIGN: IPC CONDEMNS POLICE ATTACK ON JOURNALIST

For immediate release, August 11, 2017

The International Press Centre, Lagos-Nigeria condemns the assault of Mr. Amadin Uyi a reporter with the Silverbird Television, Abuja who was brutalized by police officers during the peace anti-Buhari protest at Unity Fountain in Abuja on Tuesday 8th of August, 2017.

According to report from Premium Times, the victim alongside his camera man was brutally attacked. Their camera was then snatched and its content was tampered with.

The Director of IPC, Mr. Lanre Arogundade in a statement described the unfortunate act as unacceptable, as the journalist in question was brutalized in the line of duty.

“This kind of act is unacceptable from the police force. The duty of the police is to protect citizens and not to batter them in broad day light, considering the fact that it was a peaceful protest,” Arogundade said.

IPC therefore calls the attention of the Inspector General of Police Ibrahim Idris to immediately probe this assault, and take the necessary actions. The police officers involved should be made to issue a public apology.

SGD:
Melody Akinjiyan
Program Assistant/Safety Desk Officer IPC

Andrei Sakharov journalism contest accepting entries [Russia]

Image result for The Andrei Sakharov AwardJournalists can be nominated for cash prizes.
The Andrei Sakharov Award, Journalism as an Act of Conscience, will recognize works that present the life views of their authors, embodying them consistently at a high professional level and defending the values that Andrei Sakharov championed. 
Candidates can be nominated for this award by Russian newsrooms and citizens of Russia.
Submissions must have been published between Oct. 15, 2016 and Oct. 15, 2017 in the Russian media. Works in the languages of the nations that are part of Russia should be accompanied by a translation into Russian.
The winner will be awarded a RUB500,000 cash prize. Four prizes of RUB50,000 will also be awarded. The winner will be announced Dec. 10 during the celebration of Human Rights Day.
The submission deadline is Nov. 1.
For more information (in Russian), click here.

Free online course on climate change for journalists open [Latin America]

Image result for magazine Claves21Journalists living in Latin America can register for this free course in Spanish.
The Argentine environmental news magazine Claves21 is organizing a nine-week online course beginning Sept. 4. The program aims to provide journalists with information, knowledge and tools to cover climate change.
Journalists Damián Profeta and Fermín Koop will explore the conceptual aspects of climate change, its impact in Latin America and the rest of the world, key issues of media coverage and digital tools to create significant content.
Participants who complete the course will become part of the Claves 21 Latin American Network of Environmental Journalists and receive information about scholarships, competitions, financing and other professional opportunities.
The deadline to register is Sept. 1.
For more information (in Spanish), click here.

Journalists arrested, attacked while covering nationwide protests in DRC

Congolese police detain protestors demanding that President Joseph Kabila leave power by the end of the year in Kinshasa, DRC, 31 July 2017
Congolese police detain protestors demanding that President Joseph Kabila leave power by the end of the year in Kinshasa, DRC, 31 July 2017
 REUTERS/Kenny Katombe
This statement was originally published on rsf.org on 1 August 2017. 

Reporters Without Borders (RSF) condemns the arrests of at least 15 journalists in various cities in the Democratic Republic of Congo yesterday while covering demonstrations to demand the publication of an election calendar. Some of the journalists were physically attacked. 

The demonstrations were called by civic society groups to press the authorities to publish a calendar for elections, as envisaged in accords reached last December under which President Joseph Kabila is supposed to stand down. 

Demonstrations have been banned for the past year and the security forces dispersed yesterday's with the help of a great deal of teargas and, according to some sources, live rounds. Most of the detained journalists were eventually released but their photos and videos were usually deleted first. 

“We firmly condemn this police crackdown, which did not spare journalists who were just doing their job, said Tshivis T. Tshivuadi, the secretary-general of Journalist in Danger (JED), an RSF partner organization. We call on the newly appointed police chiefs to respect, and to ensure that their personnel respect, the work of journalists during political demonstrations.” 

The BBC's Lei Wera, Radio France Internationale's Swahili correspondent, Daniel Chube Ngorombi, and Justin Kabunga of Congo Synthèse were arrested in Goma along with a photographer who was not identified and were held for two hours. The police temporarily confiscated Wera's camera and sound recorder and deleted what she had recorded. 

In Bukavu, police used violence to arrest reporter Nino Esther and cameraman Christian Safari, who work for Canal Futur, a TV channel owned by opposition politician Vital Kamerhe. The police took them to an unidentified location and forced them delete all their video footage before releasing them. 

Seven journalists working for VoxCongoRadio Okapi and the Xinhua and Anadolunews agencies were arrested in Kinshasa, were subjected to intimidation and were confined in a school yard until released after Kinshasa's new police chief, Gen. Sylvano Kasongo Kitenge, intervened. 

RSF has just learned that two other journalists, Merveille Kakule of Radio Soleil and Georges Kisando of Graben university radio, were harassed and manhandled in the northeastern city of the Butembo and their equipment was confiscated. 

“The sole aim of these arrests was to prevent the journalists from doing their job and covering what were historic events for the DRC, said Clea Kahn-Sriber, the head of RSF's Africa desk. The crackdown was part of the government's attempts to suppress all democratic discourse. These attempts must stop now.” 

Ever since January 2015, when the National Assembly passed an electoral lawamendment allowing the authorities to postpone elections originally envisaged for November 2016, journalists have been the targets of violence and intimidation when trying to cover discontent with this decision. 

RSF and JED issued a joint release last week condemning the government's decision to restrict the movements of foreign reporters. In June, RFI reported that the authorities had not renewed the accreditation of its Kinshasa-based correspondent, Sonia Rolley. 

The DRC has seen a constant declined in media freedom for the past ten years and is ranked 154th out of 180 countries in RSF's 2017 World Press Freedom Index.