The
Graça Machel Trust announces the launch of a Women in Media Network
(WIMN), which aims to change the way media portrays African women and
children.
Recognising
the crucial role that media plays in shaping societal attitudes, the
Graça Machel Trust has established a Pan African network of women
journalists to place Africa’s women and children at the centre of
transformation within the media landscape. The WIMN will drive
coordinated messaging and build awareness on issues related to health,
education, and women’s economic empowerment that impact women and
children.
“We need to
give more space in media for women to tell their own stories in their
own way and to include the views expressed by the children of Africa. I
hope that by establishing this network we will motivate other media
houses to more equally reflect the ‘Faces and Voices’ of women and
children in media. There is a fundamental need to grow generations of
children and young people who can affirm and assert a brighter and more
positive future for themselves,” says Graça Machel, Founder of the Graça
Machel Trust.
In forming
this Network, the Trust undertook research in Central, Southern and East
Africa, as well as parts of West Africa, to identify the potential
women in media candidates, but also the recognised leaders and
influential voices in Africa’s media landscape. A group of highly
respected media owners, editors and publishers including global health
and education advocates was invited to become Advisory Board members of
the WIMN. The Board members will in their individual and collective
capacity help the Trust to build up the network and champion a movement
that collectively develops and disseminates empowering messaging and
storylines about Africa’s women and children.
WIMN advisory board
The Board
members are: South Africa’s CNBCA Editor-in-Chief Bronwyn Nielsen;
Zimbabwe’s CEO of AB Communications, Susan Makore. Editor-at-large of
IRIN, Obina Anyadike based in Kenya; Editor-in-Chief of the Nation Group
– East Africa, Tom Mshindi; Editor-in-Chief of South Africa’s City
Press, Ferial Haffajee; Executive Editor of allAfrica.com, John Allen,
based in Cape Town; Health editor of South Africa’s Mail & Guardian,
Mia Malan; Director of the Panos Institute in West Africa, Diana
Senghor; Director General of Fraternité Matin in Cote d’Ivoire, Dr.
Venance Konan; Director of International Commission on Financing Global
Education Opportunity Chief of Staff and UN Special Envoy on Global
Education, Justin van Fleet who will advise on global education related
issues and advising on educational issues will be Lars Grøsenth, Senior
Advisor on Communication and Advocacy in the Norwegian Agency for
Development Cooperation (NORAD).
At the
inaugural meeting of the Advisory Board held March this year, CNBCA
Editor-in-Chief Bronwyn Nielsen and Zimbabwe’s CEO of AB Communications,
Susan Makore were elected co-chairs.
Graça Machel, Theo Sowa, Sisonke Msimang, Josina Machel, Anurita Bains, Fred Swaniker.
Changing the narrative and faces of women in media
The Trust
has identified women journalists who are considered to be media
influencers in their own right and enjoy a large social and traditional
media footprint and legacy in their respective countries and media
spaces. WIMN will create a
The Trust
has identified women journalists who are considered to be media
influencers in their own right and enjoy a large social and traditional
media footprint and legacy in their respective countries and media
spaces. WIMN will create an inter-generational platform to allow young
talented female journalists to participate and work alongside our
continents more seasoned The WIMN will comprise an initial group of
about 30 to 40 women journalists, bloggers and influencers. The launch
of this Network is contribution by the Trust to drive the agenda to
change the current narrative of women and children in Africa.
WIMN Board
co-chair, Mrs. Susan Makore is convinced that: “Women and children’s
issues have tended to make headlines more as victims that are helpless,
abused and exploited yet women and children have over time been capable
of so much more, having overcome many obstacles and excelled in many
sectors of the economy and society. The amazing stories need to find
more expression in our media. Therefore, I hope to do my part in
ensuring that key stories that highlight and celebrate the various
facets of children and women’s activities across all sectors are given
prominence in the media by working with my colleagues that run media
houses, especially in Zimbabwe where I hail from.”
Speaking on
her role as co-chair of the Advisory Board, Bronwyn Nielsen says, “I
feel extremely honoured to accept the position of co-chair, of the
Advisory Board alongside Susan Makore, to the Graça Machel Trust Women
in Media Network. Africa’s youth and female dividends are at the core of
the continent’s future and with the right support it is in fact the
women and children who can positively impact our tomorrow from an
economic growth and development perspective. I look forward to working
with my fellow board members and all the members of this privileged
network to jointly leverage our circles of influence under the esteemed
guidance of Mrs. Machel to drive this agenda deep across the continent
with both speed and passion. Together we can create a new narrative when
it comes to Africa’s women and children.”
Makore
adds, “I am also extremely excited to be the inaugural co-chair of the
Advisory Board with Bronwyn Nielsen. “I feel extremely honoured and
privileged to be selected as one of only a handful of people from the
whole of Africa to be part of the inaugural Women in Media Network of
the Graca Machel Trust expected to put women and children’s issues top
of mind in the media.”
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