Category | Winner | Judges' comment |
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Regional Television - General News | Jody Jacobs, e.tv News | It is unusual for SA audiences to have stories beyond our borders reported by our own journalists. This piece ["Haiti Looting"] gives us real insight into what it means to try to survive extreme circumstances brought about by a natural disaster. The danger and emotion and intensity portrayed were what made this piece on Haiti a winner. |
Regional Television - Feature | Sam Rogers & Meggan Raubenheimer, e.tv | This story ["Curse of Nobody People"] highlights the lethal combination of ignorance, poverty and desperation. In Tanzania, a country of 40 million people, 270 000 are albinos who are hunted for their skin and body parts by criminals masquerading as witch doctors. |
Regional Print - General News | Piet Rampedi, City Press | While time and accuracy are the most important factors in reporting a breaking news story, updating the story is very necessary as the facts and figures change. This journalist was rewarded for his commitment to collecting information from authentic sources [for his reporting on the Julius Malema business empire], which is very important when working on a breaking news story. Such a story often reaches not only television viewers and readers of newspapers but also policy-making stakeholders. |
Regional Print - Feature | Rowan Philip, Sunday Times | Covering the Haiti earthquake was one the most challenging assignments. Many journalists descended on the island but only a few came out with insightful and spine-chilling reports. This journalist was awarded for his series of feature stories on the Haiti earthquake. |
Regional Radio - General News | Rahima Essop, Radio 702 | The winning entry [concerning the Jub Jub case] combined intense human emotion, brilliant sound, a flowing script and the story treatment varied from wraparound packages to live Q&As and voice reports. There was a new update every time the story was featured. |
Regional Radio - Feature | Melini Moses & Busi Ntuli, SABC Radio News | The winners in this category made maximum use of the key ingredients that are needed for an interesting, gripping and powerful radio news feature [for their expose on the lacklustre performance of the SA Gender Commission]. The script was concise, the sound dynamic and the research excellent. The presentation was dynamic and catchy forcing the listener to stay tuned to the very end. The subject matter was tackled with conviction and confidence. The facts were made clear and the truth presented in a fair and balanced manner. |
Regional Financial/Economic | Lloyd Gedye, Mail & Guardian | The story [on the bread-fixing scandal] reveals the shenanigans and places that were used by the conspirators to plan strategies on how best to rob ordinary unsuspecting South African consumers. The writer has tried to establish the motive behind the multi-billion rand business empires which conspired against their very loyal customers. The bread price fixing scandal had a major impact on South Africa's economy in that, in the final analysis, it placed bread - a staple food for most poor communities - beyond their reach. |
Regional Columnist | Babalwa Shota, City Press | In her weekly series of articles, our winner presents cameos which reflect the comical and the serious side of life. She laughs at herself as well as others, without crossing that critical line to unsavory humour. Her winning entry is a letter to the drug cocaine. Motivated by the "Jub Jub" saga, the writer reveals her own use of the substance and tells us how widespread the use of the drug is. She admonishes, she sympathises, and she issues a warning. She is funny; she is serious. The result is a well-written, well-rounded piece which captures the essence of life. |
Regional Photography | Jennifer Bruce, The Star | Prior to the launching of the Bus Rapid Transit System, taxi drivers threatened to disrupt it and the Security Forces were then called in to raid the notorious Nancefield Hostel. In these pictures we witness the mood and the tension captured by the winner. |
Regional Cartoonist | Wilson Mgobhozi, The Star | During the opening of the rugby match between South Africa and France, a South African Rastafarian based in France sang Nkosi Sikelela out of tune. The cartoonist illustrates the feeling of the Springboks. |
Regional Sport | Elijah Moholola, City Press | Good journalists not only cover stories that are glaring to the eye but those which require a multitude of skills and boundless energy in bringing them to the fore. The journalist had found out that an unusually high number of sportsmen were departing from what was their regular place of training. It was necessary to get the story behind the story [for his piece titled "Durandt Punches Back"]. And so the journalist successfully set out to pin down the central figure in the exodus. The individual does not generally agree to interviews but the journalist, through his persistence, got his way. Balance and fair reporting drove the journalist to acquire the views of a number of the departing stars. The manner in which he compiled all the facts gave readers clear insight into what had transpired. |
Regional Community Media | Paddy Hartegen, Watt Now | [For his piece on the shortage of engineers in South Africa.] It takes a skilled journalist to take a complex subject and decode it for the reader. If the journalist achieves that in a manner that is not too obvious, it is a bonus which is one of the treasured tools in his toolbox. |
Regional Online Media | Livhuwani Mammburu, Times Live | This winning entry makes for riveting reading and viewing as the journalist tackles the thorny issue of mining and its effect on the environment. Multimedia tools are employed to great effect to bring home the negative impact mining has had on various rural communities, underground water and farming in parts of the Mpumalanga province. |
Regional Editor's Choice | Jinine Botha, Randfontein Herald | This is what Jinine's editor said in her nomination: "From the start of her career Jinine has shown an unwavering dedication for exposing injustices and mismanagement of local authorities. However, a story is never too trivial for Jinine and she would just as easily write extensive reports on the property rates act as she would about a small boy suffering from cancer. She regularly works overtime to improve not just her writing ability, but to complete extra research for her articles. At a small community newspaper she is definitely not just a pleasure to have in the office but a reliable, trustworthy and ethical journalist dedicated to community concerns. She is a valuable asset and is sure to make a huge impact in the future." |