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Zim launches training fund
Gugulethu Ziyaphapha, Journalism.co.za
July 11, 2005

http://www.journalism.co.za/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=2635

A media trust fund to enhance the quality of training student journalists has been formed in Zimbabwe, as mandated by the controversial Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA), reports Gugulethu Ziyaphapha.

Journalists have described the establishment of the fund as a rare positive initiative to come out of the draconian AIPPA, although there are questions about how it will be administered.

The head of the Media and Information Commission (MIC), Tafataona Mahoso, whose office will be administering the trust, said it will aim to upgrade journalism training programmes at all institutions.

He said the fund will help trainee journalists and journalism schools acquire educational materials, computers and studio equipment. It will also sponsor educational trips, training workshops and help students get industrial attachments. The MIC says it is still finalizing details.

The fund will award the best students in various categories prizes Z$1 million(R1000). The categories are media law and ethics, development journalism, media opportunities arising from the land redistribution, and those arising from local national content.

Alvin Khumalo a student from Bulawayo said the fund will help promote the quality of training and journalism standards in Zimbabwe.

There are seven recognized journalism training institutions in the country. AIPPA and the MIC under Mahoso, a former trainer, are responsible for closing down four newspapers and rendering hundreds of journalists jobless.

"For an act that has been dishing out negativities including harassments and arrests of reporters since its formation four years ago, the trust fund is not a bad idea but the question is will it benefit reporters from the private media?" said Godwin Gandu, Zimbabwe's correspondent for the Mail&Guardian.

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