BBC World Service appoints new leaders for East and West African Languages
The BBC World Service has been appointed Toyosi Ogunseye, head of West Africa Languages to manage mainly Nigerian languages that include Hausa, Igbo, Yoruba, Pidgin and Afrique.
Also appointed is Rachel Akidi Okwir as head of language services for East Africa to oversee services in Afaan Oromo, Amharic, Somali, Swahili and Tigrinya.
The appointments are part of the BBC World Service’s continuing expansion in Africa.
Rachel is to be based in Nairobi, Kenya while Toyosi will be stationed in Lagos and will be starting in January 2018.
Rachael was the Editor of the flagship radio programme Focus on Africa. She joined the BBC World Service as a producer in 2002 and a wave of violence unleashed following then-President Felipe Calderon’s initiation of a war on the country’s drug cartels in late 2006.
While IPI was able to link four of the 13 killings in Mexico in 2017 to journalists’ work, the other nine deaths remain unsolved. Moreover, none of the cases have led to a conviction of those responsible for committing or masterminding the crimes. Around the region, journalists were also killed in Honduras (4), the Dominican Republic (2), Colombia (2), Guatemala (1), Peru has worked across various platforms and programmes including Network Africa, The World Today, (1) and Brazil (1).
The Middle East and North Africa remained the second most-dangerous region in 2017, although the number of deaths dropped from 41 last year to 23, all of which came in Iraq (11), Syria (9) and Yemen (3).
Asia and the Pacific followed closely with 19 journalists dead, three more than in 2016. Sixteen of those journalists appear to have been deliberately targeted in India (7), the Philippines (6), Pakistan (2) and the Maldives (1). Two others died in explosions in Afghanistan and another was shot Focus on Africa TV and the website bbcafrica.com. Born in Uganda, her career in journalism started as a freelance contributor to Ugandan newspapers and radio stations whilst a student at Makerere University.
Toyosi was the Editor of the Sunday Punch. She was the first female editor in the 45 year history of the company. An awardwinning journalist with a passion for investigative reporting, she has won over 30 awards and was the first Nigerian to win the prestigious Knight International Journalism award.
Toyosi is a fellow of President Barack Obama’s Young African Leaders Initiative and currently sits on the board of the World Editors Forum. She holds an MSc in Media and Communication and is currently studying for a PhD in Politics and International Relations at the University of Leicester. (BBC)