Amnesty International has announced its
media awards shortlist, recognising excellence in human rights
reporting and acknowledging journalism’s significant contribution to
the UK public’s awareness and understanding of human rights issues.
The
winners of the 15th annual Amnesty International UK Media Awards,
sponsored by PCI:Fitch, will be announced at a ceremony at the Café
Royal, London, on 27 June, hosted by BBC News 24 and Newsnight
presenter Emily Maitlis.
Shortlists
are announced in eight categories. The ninth is an international award
– the Amnesty International Special Award for Human Rights Journalism
Under Threat – and the winner will be announced on the night.
Shortlists
Gaby Rado Memorial Award (for a journalist at the start of their career)
How Iraq lives now, The Guardian – Ghaith Abdul-Ahad
Human rights in the Former Soviet Union, The Guardian – Nick Paton Walsh
Reports from Sudan, Jacob Zuma and Jordan, More4 – Nima Elbagir
Justice for Omar, The Argus (Brighton) – Andy Tate, Miriam Wells, Rob Hustwayte and Rachel Pegg
Tales from the edge, the Glasgow girls, BBC Scotland, Lindsey Hill and Simon Parsons
Torture flights: the inside story, The Sunday Herald – Neil Mackay
Judges: Patrick Corrigan, Steve Crawshaw, Paul Donovan, Clare Hudson, Tracy McVeigh, Maggie O’Kane
‘Dust people’ forage for food in Zimbabwe ruins, The Sunday Times – Christina Lamb
Iraq special report, The Observer – Peter Beaumont
The sex traffickers, The Sunday Telegraph – David Harrison
Periodicals
Beasts of prey, The Sunday Times Magazine – Christine Toomey
Combatting caste, New Internationalist – Mari Marcel Thekaekara and Nikki van der Gaag
Trauma on Loan, Guardian Weekend – Joe Sacco
Rwanda – facing the virus, Positive Lives exhibition – Stuart Freedman
Sex – the new black market, The Sunday Times Magazine – Stephanie Kuykendal
Survivors of domestic violence – South Africa, foto8 – Jodi Bieber
Children accused of witchcraft, BBC Radio News – Angus Crawford
The gay divide, BBC Radio Current Affairs – Leonida Krushelnycky
Reports from rural China, BBC Radio 4 – Rupert Wingfield Hayes
Asylum, BBC – Amanda Richardson, Peter Gordon
Children of Beslan, BBC and HBO – Eva Ewart, Leslie Woodhead
‘Never Again’, BBC Panorama – Darren Kemp, Fergal Keane
China – land seizures, BBC News – Rupert Wingfield Hayes
Conflict – tin: Congo's tin soldiers, Channel 4 News – ITN
Zardeh – a poisoned village, BBC Newsnight – Amir Amirani, Frances Harrison
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