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.
Former Serb paramilitary found guilty on all charges, including burning alive of 120 civilians.
Accused requests that his experts be given access to DNA samples taken from mass graves.
Lukic cousins, who have pleaded not guilty to 21 counts of crimes against humanity, to hear their fate in court later this month.
Witness says Serb police and military units forced her and others to leave their village in western Kosovo.
He says UN prison guards wake him up every half hour to check whether he is still alive.
But defence dismisses prosecution claims about witness’s alleged foul play as unfounded.
They say only way Karadzic could have been granted immunity would be through a Security Council resolution.
Prosecutors claim Hartmann deliberately undertook to publish confidential details of judges’ decisions.