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Journalists from leading African media join SputnikPro project in Moscow

18 October
Moscow, Rossiya Segodnya Press Office

The 15 participants include television and radio hosts, as well as correspondents and producers of African biggest media holdings

Владимир Трефилов/РИА Новости - Rossiya Segodnya, 780, 18.10.2022

A special session of the SputnikPro project for young journalists from African countries opened in the headquarters of the Rossiya Segodnya International Information Agency and Radio Sputnik Moscow. The 15 participants include television and radio hosts, as well as correspondents and producers of African biggest media holdings, such as the Kenya Broadcasting Corporation (KBC), News Agency of Nigeria, Zambia Daily Mail, Namibia Broadcasting Corporation (NBC), Ethiopian News Agency (ENA), South Africa’s Independent Media Newspaper House, Radio Sabra FM (Tunisia) and Cameroon Radio Television (CRTV), to name a few.

The participants will spend a busy week attending lectures and workshops from Sputnik’s leading media experts, getting to know colleagues from different countries and taking part in Moscow’s cultural life.

This is SputnikPro’s first specialised face-to-face session for journalists from Africa since the end of the pandemic. It is a pleasure to note that it is being attended by the biggest African media outlets with audiences in the millions. In this way we are restoring full-fledged, direct dialogue between Russia and African nations.

Vasily Pushkov
Sputnik Director for International Cooperation

“Today was the start of the lectures on how to produce and promote content. The workshop on how to make a video simple, concise and viral at the same time was useful. I am thrilled to see all this in Moscow. It’s a stunningly beautiful city,” said Emmanuella Kernyuy Wvemnyay, a CRTV correspondent and news anchor.

“I am happy to attend this experience sharing program. As a Zambia Daily Mail correspondent, I also publish photo reports. So, I’m primarily looking forward to the workshop on photojournalism. I would be interested in learning how my colleagues from the Sputnik news agency work,” noted Christine Chihame from Zambia.

“Print media is now in crisis all over the world. By the time we report a piece of news in newspapers, it is already obsolete. So, we are looking for a new way of doing things. It is important to understand how to attract an audience and make a financially viable media outlet. This is why I am interested in getting an inside look at how the Sputnik news agency works,” said Gifty Mamley Agyemang, a correspondent of The Insight Newspaper (Ghana) about her expectations.

Sputnik’s face-to-face module for journalists from African countries is supported by the New Generation program of the Federal Agency for the Commonwealth of Independent States, Compatriots Living Abroad, and International Humanitarian Cooperation (Rossotrudnichestvo).