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Entries for October 2009

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International Women's
Media Foundation
1625 K Street NW, Suite 1275
Washington, DC 20006
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Phone: 202 496 1992
Email: info@iwmf.org

Voice of America featured 2009 Courage in Journalism Award winner Agnes Taile on In Focus. 2002 Courage winner Sandra Nyaira was also interviewed for the broadcast. Watch the VOA segment.

Rozanna Yami, a woman journalist in Saudi Arabia, was pardoned by the country’s King Abdullah for her involvement in a talk show for the Lebanese Broadcasting Corporation during which a Saudi man talked about his sexual exploits. Yami had been sentenced to 60 lashes on Oct. 24. Read the article in the Los Angeles Times.

Jila Baniyaghoob, a 2009 winner of an IWMF Courage in Journalism Award, received an International Press Freedom Award from Canadian Journalists for Free Expression. Novaya Gazeta, the newspaper of 2009 Courage winner Iryna Khalip, also received an award. Both will be recognized at a CJFE awards ceremony in December.  Read the CJFE release.

The Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard has prepared a comprehensive online guide for journalists covering the H1N1 flu story. The site offers tools for reporters and editors. Visit the Covering Pandemic Flu Web site.

Christiane Amanpour, CNN’s chief international correspondent and a member of the IWMF board of directors, will receive a Reporter of the Year Award from the Newswomen’s Club of New York. Helen Thomas, a 1995 winner of the IWMF Lifetime Achievement Award, will be recognized with a Lifetime Achievement Award. The awards will be presented Nov. 12. Read more on the organization’s Web site

The 2009 IWMF Courage and Lifetime Achievement award winners persevere when reporting, despite threats and attacks on their lives. They spoke about their experiences as journalists at a panel discussion on Oct. 26 at The National Press Club in Washington, D.C.

Join the IWMF global network of women and men who believe that the full participation of women in the news media furthers freedom of the press around the world. Through the IWMF network women in the news media join together in new ways to share ideas, resources, strategies and career advice.

Click on the links below to view the acceptance speeches:

 

The Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism at Arizona State University has announced a fellowship program in January 2010. Professional journalists with at least two years of business journalism experience are invited to apply. Application deadline is Nov. 2. Read more or apply.

Kathy Gannon, a Canadian journalist who won the IWMF Courage in Journalism Award in 2002, wrote about Afghanistan in Foreign Affairs magazine. Read the article.

Judy Woodruff, a member of the IWMF board of directors and chair of the Courage in Journalism Awards, was honored by Duke University’s alumni association with a Distinguished Alumni Award. The award, presented in October in North Carolina, recognizes alumni "who have made significant contributions in their own fields, in service to the university, or for the betterment of humanity." Read more on the Duke magazine Web site.

Known as a fearless reporter and advocate for women, Jila Baniyaghoob has been imprisoned in Iran four times. Her most recent arrest was in June following election protests.

By Peggy Simpson Amira Hass says she is not an expert on Palestinians but on the Israeli occupation of Palestine. Hass, recipient of the 2009 Lifeti...

By Lindsey Wray ‘Shhh. Be quiet so we can listen.’ This is what Agnes Taile remembers hearing each afternoon as a little girl in Cameroon when her f...

By Peggy Simpson Jila Baniyaghoob became a journalist in 1979, at age 11, when she published a short story about children and poverty in Keyhan, a ma...

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