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Showing Visitor Messages 1 to 2 of 2
  1. IWPR
    15th July 2008 11:01 PM - permalink
    IWPR
    Our Mission

    Build peace and democracy through free and fair media

    Our Values
    Integrity, human rights, local empowerment


    What we do
    establish sustainable networks and institutions
    develop skills and professionalism
    provide reliaable reporting
    build dialogue and debate

    Where we work now
    Afghanistan
    Caucasus
    Central Asia
    The Netherlands
    Iran
    Iraq
    The Philippines
    Southeastern Europe
    Syria
    Uganda
    Southern Africa
    Zimbabwe

    "IWPR fills a critical gap by helping local journalists to focus on human rights and justice issues. In the process, it contributes to democratic transitions, and demonstrates that the best war reporting is not about military conflict, but human consequences.” Samantha Power Pulitzer Prize-winning author of A Problem from Hell: America and the Age of Genocide."

    IWPR builds democracy at the frontlines of conflict and change through the power of professional journalism. IWPR programs provide intensive hands-on training, extensive reporting and publishing, and ambitious initiatives to build the capacity of local media. Supporting peace-building, development and the
    We have grown substantially from its origins disseminating frontline reporting by Balkan journalists to counter nationalist hate speech and international misunderstanding throughout the conflicts of the 1990s.

    The Institute now exists as an international network for media development, with not for- profit divisions in Europe, the US and Africa supporting training and capacity-building programs for local journalism, with field programs in more than two dozen countries.

    Under dictatorships such as Zimbabwe and Uzbekistan, and on-going conflict areas such as Chechnya, IWPR serves a critical role as “electronic samizdat,” supporting local reporters under siege and utilizing new technologies to disseminate their reporting in country, regionally and internationally.

    This includes extensive syndication in newspapers throughout the United States and regular appearances on NPR, CNN and BBC. In transitional regions, as the Balkans, IWPR has established a network of independent local media organizations to provide journalist training and investigative reporting for the long term. This includes a focus on reporting on war crimes and war crimes tribunals, in The Hague and in the regions.

    In conflict and post-conflict areas such as Iraq, IWPR operates at the frontline of struggle to professionalize media and civil society, empowering responsible local voices, supporting human rights and development reporting, and contributing to cross-community understanding. In Afghanistan, IWPR has established the country’s first-ever independent news agency to provide balanced indigenous reporting on development, electoral and social issues. In both areas, IWPR provides special focus on empowering women journalists. In Uganda, IWPR is launching an independent radio news agency in advance of critical elections.
  2. Shebeen
    15th July 2008 10:53 PM - permalink
    Shebeen
    Hello IWPR,

    Welcome to our Shebeen!

    Please read the rules and enjoy your stay!

    Shebeen

About Me

  • About IWPR
    Location
    London

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  • Last Activity: 15th July 2008 11:09 PM
  • Join Date: 15th July 2008
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Blog

View IWPR's BlogRecent Entries
Latest Blog Entry

Posted 15th July 2008 at 11:06 PM by IWPR Comments 0
Posted in Uncategorized
By Benedict Unendoro in Masvingo

The food situation in Zimbabwe’s arid southern province of Masvingo has reached crisis point, with many families unable to access even basic foodstuffs.

In early June, social welfare minister Nicholas Goche banned humanitarian agencies from operating in Zimbabwe after accusing them of "breaching the terms and conditions of their registration".

Since the aid agencies stopped distributing food, the state-controlled...

Posted 15th July 2008 at 11:05 PM by IWPR Comments 0
Posted in Uncategorized
By Joseph Sithole in Harare

One of President Robert Mugabe’s closest allies has issued a sharp rebuke to Zimbabwe’s leaders for allowing political and economic problems to fester.

Gideon Gono, governor of the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe, told the state-owned Herald newspaper in an interview last week that the country would not achieve an immediate economic turnaround unless key stakeholders found the political will to deal honestly with the country’s crisis.
...

Posted 15th July 2008 at 11:02 PM by IWPR Comments 0
Posted in Uncategorized
By Hativagone Mushonga in Harare

In the face of growing condemnation from the international community, President Robert Mugabe is appealing to the Zimbabwean public for support as he battles for legitimacy.

In what amounts to an after-the-fact election campaign, the state-owned media have gone into overdrive to try to salvage Mugabe’s battered image after the second-round presidential election held on June 27.

The run-up to the ballot was one of the most...

Posted 11th July 2008 at 11:07 PM by IWPR Comments 0
Posted in Uncategorized
By Jennifer Koons in London

The large-scale migration of Zimbabweans to the United Kingdom in recent years has earned London the nickname “Harare North”.

The exact number varies but experts suggest that roughly one million Zimbabwean expatriates, most fleeing rising economic and political instability in their home country, now reside in the UK.

Between 2000 and 2007, there were an estimated 20,600 asylum applications and about one-third of those have received...

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