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Somali Journalists Rights Agency

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Somali news cameraman Abdullahi Farah Duguf has won the 2008 Rory Peck Award for News. The award honors freelance coverage of on-the-day news, where the focus is on the immediacy of the story. The winning footage Two Weeks in Mogadishu was shot in September 2007 and describes the human misery in the war-torn capital.
 

Abdullah Farah Duguf, known as 'Duguf', has been working as a cameraman in Somalia since 1993. He has also worked extensively with international broadcasters and agencies as a fixer, in particular APTN. Duguf says that the deteriorating situation in Somalia over the past two years has made it almost impossible for him and most other journalists to operate there. He has decided to seek refuge in Djibouti for the foreseeable future.

Duguf's footage shows distressing scenes of violence, destruction and human misery in Mogadishu as the insurgency erupted into almost daily battles on the streets. Duguf captured the terrifying level of violence on the streets where there is nothing to shield local people - or journalists. At one point he became a target himself. In the city hospital he met a man whose wife and three children had just been killed in a mortar attack on their home. And in the makeshift camps outside the city, a woman asked him to film her starving children.

The judges said the film had "drama, vividness, humanity and context". One said: "This is one of the most difficult stories in the world to tell. But he told it with clarity, courage and an amazing eye for detail. The camerawork is extraordinary in the circumstances."

Duguf says: "In this civil war local journalists have become a target. During this filming assignment I received a lot of threats and intimidations as have other journalists, but despite this danger I worked very hard to ensure I remained anonymous. Never in the past 17 years have conditions been so insecure, dangerous and chaotic." 

 

To read more about the Rory Peck Awards 2008, click here.
 

FREE EXPRESSION SPOTLIGHT:

SOJRA pressures the Puntland Foreign Relation Minister that Puntland Administration to stop the pressure and arresting against the Puntland Journalists


Al-shabaab Group continues media transgressions in coastal town of Kismayo in southern Somalia

SOJRA lashing to Somali Red Crescent (SRC) in Las Anod in sol-region of Somalia


Somalia continues to be a treacherous place for the journalists who risk their lives to bring the story of the ongoing conflict to the world 27-July, 2008 

Call for international support to make for journalism safer in Somalia, Africa’s most dangerous country for journalists and the world’s deadliest place for media professionals behind Iraq-11 August, 2008 



 
 


 

 
 


 

 


 

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