Session 6: 2004 MOHAMED AMIN AWARD
Featured Speakers: Salim Amin,
CEO, Camerapix, Kenya; Tony Donovan, Managing Director, Reuters TV, UK; Rodney
Pinder, Director, INSI, UK
Tony Donovan: Good morning everybody and welcome back. I'm
delighted to introduce the 2004 Mohamed Amin Award. The Mohamed Amin Award
was introduced in 1997 which was one year after his death in a hi-jacked airliner
near the Comoros. A lot of us in this industry wanted to make sure that there
was an annual reminder of the qualities that Mo brought to our industry, qualities
that made him possibly the most famous cameraman in the world. He is remembered
and rightly so for the many stories that brought Africa to the rest of the
world but above all he is remembered for his coverage of the Ethiopian famine.
This year is the 20th anniversary of that coverage and of course
with much publicity the Live Aid DVD has been re-released and the Live Aid
song re-recorded, so we thought it might be appropriate to remind ourselves
again of Mo's images which really were the catalyst to that entire effort.
(Runs Tape)
Mo Amin's message lives on not just in that footage or in the affections
of those of us who knew him but most importantly through the Mohamed Amin
Foundation in Africa, so let me introduce now Mohamed's son, Salim Amin, who's
going to talk to you about the Foundation and also present the 2004 Mohamed
Amin Award.
Salim Amin: Thanks Tony, first of all thanks to News Xchange
and Reuters for once again presenting this award. It means an enormous amount
to me and my family that you continue to remember him. Seven years ago at
a similar conference when I set up the Mohamed Amin Foundation, a training
school for African journalists hopefully not just to talk about images like
those but to talk about the positive and rewarding aspects of Africa that
many of us don't go into. Three years ago we had a graduate that this year
won the CNN African journalist of the Year Award. There are some sponsors
that I want to thank who continue to support the school year in year out,
Reuters, CNN, the BBC and Bloomberg for their scholarships. It makes a lot
of difference to us and I know this is not a fundraising gathering but anyone
else who can help, we need more and I dare say that some of these graduates
will one day be as useful to you all as the person who the Foundation is named
after. Tony Blair said that 2005 will be the year for Africa but if the hungry
could eat words then there wouldn't be famine on a lot of this continent,
so we need your help to make that a reality and make 2005 the year for Africa,
make sure that the stories are told and not just the bad stories but a lot
of the good stories as well. The Mohamed Amin Award was introduced to recognise
those who have made a contribution to TV news through their enterprise, courage,
initiative, determination and drive but were normally not recognised or particularly
high profile. Throughout the history of the award there have been many deserving
winners who have met these criteria but none more so than this year. Throughout
the last 18 months while the glare of the world's spotlight has been firmly
on Iraq many of the images that we have come to rely upon to tell that story
have been recorded not by western journalists not by staff from the agencies
or by freelancers and not by cameramen able to leave after a period of time.
We have all relied on local Iraqi freelance cameramen to tell the story of
their country. They have come from a very mixed bag of backgrounds, some with
experience of journalism most without; barbers, electricians and academics
alongside men who had previously worked for Iraqi TV all driven to tell the
stories of the towns in which they lived, Fallujah, Najaf, Ramadi, Karbala,
towns that have been critical in the continuing chaos in Iraq, towns that
we from the west cannot cover. This band of freelancers work under constant
threat, as Sandy MacIntyre of APTN has pointed out they are both mistrusted
by their own communities and under threat from US forces - in the latest terrible
example, Dhia Najim, killed by a US bullet while filming in Ramadi. The courage
to operate under constant danger, the determination to tell the story, the
initiative to get their tapes out, the drive to continue regardless; this
year the Mohamed Amin Award goes to a very worthy winner, actually a group
of winners, the freelance cameramen of Iraq. Here's a short video to illustrate
their work.
(Runs tape)
Each year the winner of the award receives a bursary provided by
Reuters. There is an obvious problem this year with doing that with this year's
widespread group of winners. After thinking about this we have decided to
donate the funds to the organisation best placed to help them as a group:
INSI the International News Safety Institute, already actively involved in
helping to secure the safety of all journalists working in Iraq, so I will
ask Rodney Pinder to come and accept the cheque on behalf of the winners of
the 2004 Mohamed Amin Award: the freelance cameramen of Iraq.
Rodney Pinder: Thanks very much Salim, this is terrific. I can
recall my own friendship with Mo, your Dad and the great times we had in Africa.
He would be very proud of what Salim is doing now, and of the Mohamed Amin
Foundation and of Camerapix. So I'm sure he'll be shooting this from a comfortable
position somewhere. I'd like to take just a minute of your time if I may to
remind those of you who don't know what the International News Safety Institute
is and how we came to be in this position today. INSI was set up by the news
industry a year or so ago out of concern at the rising numbers of journalists
being killed around the world. The situation was spiralling out of control
and still is but this was an effort by the news industry to stop talking and
complaining about it and to do something practical to tackle the situation.
INSI, I should say is focussed on news safety utterly and completely, nothing
else but safety. In the past year we've taken some practical steps to address
this situation. We've begun discussions with key military organisations, the
Israeli Defence Force, the British military, the American military and we're
beginning discussions with NATO to talk about the safety of journalists in
the battle space. We proceed on the basis of our right to be there, that the
rules of engagement take account of our right to be there and that there must
be open and transparent enquiry when journalists fall in action. We've got
a long way to go and it's going to be a tough haul but we've made a beginning.
We've also begun a series of safety debates, which take place in London and
Brussels and bring together conflict reporters and cameramen to discuss their
experiences and exchange ideas about how we can do this job better and survive.
We have a website which gives advice and guidance. We give safety training
for those in need who cannot afford their own. We've already done the first
safety training for Iraqi journalists in Iraq, we've recently completed a
course in Russia and a few months ago we did one for Colombian journalists
who are among the most threatened on the globe. We have now begun a global
inquiry into the causes of deaths of journalists which will include international
jurists, news organisations and journalist support groups. It will be chaired
by a person you all know, Richard Sambrook, the head of news at BBC World.
We have also just completed the very first survey of specific safety requirements
of women covering conflict and this has come out with some interesting details
which we will be following up, there are copies available at this conference.
At this point I would like to move on to what is perhaps a sensitive
area. Our very first moderator at our very first debate at this conference
mentioned the cleansing rite of self-examination and self-criticism, I think
in that light I would just like to say a few other words which might be a
little embarrassing or painful for some but I make no excuse for that and
I take my cue from an excellent paper on news safety and conflict done by
Vaughn Smith, a prominent freelance cameraman who now runs the Frontline Club
for experienced reporters in London. His article is an amazing piece of work
with much thought for us all and it will be published on our website on Monday.
He says in the introduction, 'risk in journalism is here to stay and no safety
policy can be expected to make everybody safe' but this needs to be reflected
in our operations and thinking. Reform is needed but poorly executed safety
measures and inadequately considered controls will always risk limiting journalism
more than at controlling safety. Lives can be saved through the improvement
of logistics and field skills and foreign news gathering, nobody in television
news-gathering has lost their life through bad writing but many have been
killed through poor preparation, logistical failure and inadequate field craft.
And this comes home to my own firmly held view that far too often these days
the only professionals on a battlefield who are utterly unprepared for what
they would encounter there are the journalists and we must do something about
this. We are good at pointing fingers elsewhere and we should point fingers
where the laying of blame is constructive and something can be achieved. But
we really have got to stop our whingeing and address or problems ourselves,
no one else can be so relied upon as ourselves. There is much to do yet relatively
few news organisations subscribe to this. The ones that do can be literally
counted on the fingers of two hands - the ones who are really dedicated to
safer news coverage. Frankly it's a disgrace that more news organisations
around the world where there are thousands of journalists at risk in their
daily reporting do not receive better protection, better equipment, better
training, better education, better insurance, better consideration and better
care from their employers. These include freelancers and my colleague Tina
Carr at the Rory Peck Trust knows more about this than most on whom we depend
on so much and yet we far too often give back so little to insure that they
can do their jobs in some degree of greater safety. Of 1200 journalists and
media support workers killed around the world in the past 10 years, 90% of
them are casualties in their own countries killed by criminals, by shadowy
gun squads, by governments and their own security forces and in an appalling
94% of these cases no one has ever been brought to justice. So I would appeal
to you to help INSI, it is your organisation, it is your safety net and every
cent you pay in membership fees is ploughed back into new safety work for
you and other less fortunate journalists from around the world who need help
and need guidance and assistance. So we need your support, Salim's Camerapix,
one of the smallest but more perfectly formed of news organisations recognises
the importance of this and was one of INSI's first and most appreciated members.
It is a small organisation but it is large in heart and generosity of spirit
to endangered colleagues around Africa and elsewhere and this award exemplifies
that effort. In Iraq Iraqi journalists are most at threat, we now count more
than 60 news media personnel killed in this conflict in only 19 months and
of that, 33 of them have been Iraqis. So this award is for all those unsung
heroes and INSI will ensure that every penny goes towards safety equipment,
safety advice and safety training as far as we can stretch the money. And
in an effort to stretch this money a little bit more...I thank Reuters for its
generosity in getting this award and getting the fund going; I spent some
time at this conference in the past 24 hours and already we have received
pledges form AKE and Pilgrim, BBC, NBC, CNN, ITV and the Rory Peck Trust amounting
to an additional £7,500 which we can add to this fund to do something really
meaningful for our friends and colleagues in Iraq and we appeal to you to
help us reach a target of £15,000 to do really good work for these people.
Over to you John.
John Owen: I just want to say on Rodney's behalf and speaking
as a member of the INSI board we would like to appeal to you to be one of
the magic partners and Rodney is going to be near the exits as you leave today
and it is a really selfless opportunity to put your own organisation on the
record in helping the Iraqi journalists through INSI and provide more training
so we really are appealing to you if we had more time we would start an auction
off right now and we would stay in this room until we had a sizeable number
of contributors, so we are going to appeal to your generosity and ask you
to do that.
Now we are very privileged to move to the next part of our programme
and Ulla Terkelsen from TV2 in Denmark has a very special guest and the conversation
will take place now.