Daily Dispatch

Nigerian journalist wins top fact-checking award

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A NIGERIAN journalist on Thursday won the top prize in the annual African Fact-Checking awards for his work debunking claims about legislatio­n on the age of sexual consent.

At a ceremony in Johannesbu­rg, Benjamin Ezeamalu, of the Nigerian online news site Premium Times, collected the award, which was launched last year to encourage fact-checking journalism by media across Africa.

The prizes are run by Africa Check, an independen­t, a non-profit organisati­on created in 2012 by the AFP Foundation – the media training arm of the AFP news agency.

Ezeamalu secured the 000 (R30 843) winner’s cheque after a jury considered 51 competitio­n entries from 15 countries, ranging from Ethiopia and Egypt in the north to SA and Zimbabwe in the south.

“Fact-checking is a really important part of journalism. It is necessary that as journalist­s we hold public figures to account for what they say,” Ezeamalu said at the ceremony.

Peter Cunliffe-Jones, founder of Africa Check, hailed the winning report for “taking a claim on a sensitive topic – the age of consent in Nigeria – and clinically, carefully examining the evidence to show it was false”.

The two runner-up prizes went to South African journalist­s Phillip de Wet, of the Mail & Guardian newspaper, and Pieter-Louis Myburgh, from the Media24 news group.

De Wet was commended for his report about spending on the home of President Jacob Zuma and comparison­s with the late former president Nelson Mandela, while Myburgh exposed false claims about train safety.

The awards ceremony on Thursday evening, hosted by the African Media Initiative, also marked the launch of a French-language version of Africa Check: www.fr.africachec­k.org.

The new website, known as Africa Check– FR, is edited in Dakar by Senegalese journalist Assane Diagne, formerly editor-in-chief of the APS news agency.

AFP CEO and chairman of the AFP Foundation, Emmanuel Hoog, praised Africa Check for “bringing independen­t, non-partisan fact-checking to public debate and the media in anglophone Africa”. — AFP

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