By ANNIE ZULU in Nairobi Kenya
Over 30 Journalists from East and Southern Africa gathered in Nairobi, Kenya for a three-day media training on ‘Sensitive Reporting on Harmful Practices.'
The training organized by the African Union (AU) Ending Harmful
Practices Unit in collaboration with the Spotlight
Initiative Africa Regional Programme, UNFPA-UNICEF
Joint Programme on the Elimination of Female Genital Mutilation, and
partners kicked off last week and brought together 34 media practitioners and
scholars from ten countries including Kenya, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Malawi,
Mozambique, Ethiopia, Tanzania, Uganda, South Sudan, and Somalia.
The event aimed to
garner the support of media representatives and university journalism faculty
members in leading media sector actions and reforms toward ethical, informed,
balanced, human rights-focused and victim-sensitive reporting on harmful
practices.
The journalists were
drawn from AU member states currently implementing the African Union campaigns
on ending Child marriage and eliminating female genital mutilation.
Journalists engaged in the training will form a network of journalists reporting on FGM and child marriage in Africa.
Despite critical
progress being made in eliminating FGM, an estimated 55 million girls under the
age of 15 in 28 African countries have experienced or are at risk of
experiencing FGM.
Globally, one in every
five girls is formally married or in an informal union, before reaching age 18.
In developing countries, that number rises to 36 percent of girls married
before age 18, and 10 percent of girls married before age 15.
In his remarks to
participants, UNFPA Kenya Deputy Representative Dr Ezizgeldi Hellenov noted
that journalists have a role to play in raising awareness on sensitive social
issues such as FGM and child marriage, while upholding the rights and dignity
of survivors.
“The media is trusted
to shape public discourse through balanced reporting, and must hold
policy-makers and other actors accountable when it comes to creating a safer
and more equal world for women and girls,” said Dr. Hellenov.
In line with the African Union campaigns on the elimination of FGM and
child marriage, participants engaged in the training will form part of an
Africa-wide network of Media practitioners reporting on harmful practices.
The network will
facilitate coordinated and engaged media coverage while allowing members to
share experiences, lessons learned, and best practices in human rights focussed
reporting against Harmful practices that affect women and girls in Africa.
In addition, there
will be an annual award and recognition event for the top three outstanding
media practitioners reporting on harmful practices on the continent.
A second similar
training programme is planned in the West and Central Africa region, covering
ten countries, including Niger, Nigeria, Mauritania, Egypt, Chad, Senegal,
Sierra Leone, Ghana, Democratic Republic of Congo, and Liberia.
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