Simon Jennings
Africa Editor
Africa Editor
As Africa Editor, Simon oversees print and radio production for IWPR in Uganda, Kenya, the Sudans and the Democratic Republic of Congo. IWPR’s journalists across the region produce detailed analysis on conflict, justice and rule of law for both a local and international audience. Simon grew up in Sussex in south east England. He spent a year working in post-apartheid South Africa in 1999 and has since managed humanitarian projects in refugee camps for Sudanese and Congolese in northern Uganda. Simon has an MA in Anthropology from the University of Edinburgh and after studying journalism as a postgraduate at City University, London, he worked as a junior editor at the China Daily newspaper in Beijing. He began at IWPR in November 2007 as a reporter on the ICTY/western Balkans project, based in The Hague. In 2009 Simon became the producer of IWPR’s ‘Facing Justice’ radio programme in northern Uganda. Along with a team of Darfuri journalists, he has also produced the Fi al Mizan, a weekly investigative radio slot on justice issues in Darfur.
Public hearings strengthen local judiciary, but some experts say they don’t reflect full range of crimes.
Training and support for staff of country’s leading media on international justice and political reporting.
Groundbreaking development made public at launch of IWPR and Wayamo Foundation programme.
Reporters will be mentored as they work on programmes for an audience of four million.
Recent thaw in relations between Khartoum and South Sudan could be reversed without rapid territorial solution for contested region.
Protest participants “aware, angry and hungry”, but formal attempts at consolidate leadership fail to add momentum.
President under increasing pressure as student protests gather pace, but opposition forces still lack coherence.
Appeals judges in The Hague reject challenges from defence teams, but crucial legal definition remains unresolved.
Training programme in Juba ahead of new series addressing women’s rights in areas bordering Sudan.
As eastern region sees renewed violence, commentators question whether justice process actually deters atrocities.