TWO journalists, Victor Ekwealor, a Nigerian and Emmanuel Agbenonwossi, a Togolese have been announced as the pioneer Fellows for the newly introduced Digital Rights and Inclusion Media Fellowship.
The media fellowship is a project of Paradigm Initiative, a social enterprise dedicated to the promotion of digital rights and inclusion in Africa.
The fellowship had attracted 116 applications from 19 countries, a statement released by Paradigm Initiative, said.
According to the statement, the Paradigm Initiative’s Communications Officer, Sodiq Alabi,said, “we are pleased to announce the selection of two brilliant journalists for the inaugural edition of our media fellowship.”
“We are excited about the quality of applications the fellowship attracted in its first year,” Alabi added
He explained that the Fellowship program is a 5-month program designed to immerse selected journalists in digital rights advocacy and digital inclusion intervention efforts in Africa.
The Fellows will work with Paradigm Initiative on various projects and contribute to improving media interest in relevant issues.”
Emmanuel Agbenonwossi is a Togolese journalist and the managing editor of AfroTribune. Agbenonwossi works to advance professional journalism and digital freedom with media and Internet rights defenders globally. Emmanuel has contributed to policy research in Togo, Ghana, Cote-d’Ivoire, Burkina Faso and other African countries.
He is a fellow of UNESCO, ICANN, AfriSIG and the IGF Academy. Emmanuel Agbenonwossi is an alumnus of the University of Greenwich (UK), the Central University of Tunisia and the University of Malta.
He holds a Master’s Degree in Journalism, a post-graduate diploma in Cyber-Security, Leadership and Business Information Technology.
Victor Ekwealor is a Nigerian writer, storyteller and award-winning multimedia journalist. Victor works as Editor at TechPoint.
His flair for storytelling stems from the desire to highlight untold African stories from the highest journalistic standards with modern technological tools.
Victor believes Africans would either tell more African stories or watch the world do it for them. He is interested in, and mostly covers, the interaction of human beings and technology. He is also interested in technology, startups, innovations, policies, digital inclusion and digital rights.
The fellowship will commence in September 2018, with a two-week residency at Paradigm Initiative’s Nigerian offices, in Aba, Abuja Ajegunle, Kano and Yaba, and run until January 2019. Fellows will also get the chance to connect with Paradigm Initiative team members in Yaounde and Nairobi.