Uzbek Journalists Eye Balkan Collaboration During BIRN Summer School

BIRN’s Summer School has inspired two Uzbek journalists to pursue cross-border collaboration with colleagues from the Balkans.

One result of BIRN’s 14th Summer School of Investigative Reporting may be more cross-border cooperation between journalists from Uzbekistan and the Balkans.

Among the more than 30 participating reporters are Anastasia Galimova and Yuriy Park, thanks to a partnership between BIRN and the Network for Border Crossing Journalism, N-ost, and its Spheres of Influence Uncovered project bringing together journalists from seven countries across Eurasia in covering the impact of international economic cooperation.

“After the lectures, I got even more inspiration to work and investigate,” Galimova said on Day Four of the week-long course in Mlini, near Dubrovnik on Croatia’s Adriatic coast.

“Also it is a good experience to meet many colleagues from different countries because most of the time I work remotely and online. It is a great opportunity for me to talk with so many investigative journalists and hear their experiences and to know what is happening in different parts of the world.”

One notable difference the Uzbek journalists noticed was the level of transparency in other countries.

“We heard during the BIRN summer school that, for example, when a journalist in Sweden asks for some documents, the government gives it to them,” said Park. “It is much harder to get that kind of document in our country. Another problem is the safety of journalists.”

Park said he had been “inspired” by a talk by Russian journalist Elena Kostyuchenko as well as lead trainer Blake Morrison and, from Sweden, the investigative journalists Ali Fegan and Maria Georgieva.

“I see how they treat their job and how it is done on a very high level,” Park said.

Every year, participants in the Summer School have the opportunity to work on investigative, cross-border stories with the support of experienced BIRN editors.

Park and Galimova said they already had some ideas.

“We have already talked with some of our colleagues and shared some ideas,” Galimova told BIRN. “For me, it is crucial to find collaboration outside of the Central Asia region. We have seen here that we have a lot of topics similar to those of the Balkan countries, for example, Chinese investments. We’ve talked with our colleagues and we have found the same patterns.”

Park said he was new to cross-border collaboration.

“We didn’t have any cooperation with colleagues from the Balkans, but as we are developing our ideas we are seeing some connection between Uzbekistan and Balkan and we want to explore it,” he said. “There are many issues that we can only cover through cross-border cooperation so it is a great opportunity and we are looking forward to doing that.”

BIRN Summer School Day 3: Interviews, Tech, Data and Digital Wellbeing

BIRN’s Summer School of Investigative Journalism continued with interview tips and tactics, insight into the benefits of new technologies and advice on staying well while on the job.

Day Three of BIRN’s Summer School of Investigative Reporting began on Wednesday with a session dedicated to the secrets of a good interview before considering the benefits of new technologies and the challenge of protecting mental health.

Authenticity, preparation and “knowing your subject” are key to conducting a good interview, lead trainer and Reuters investigative projects editor Blake Morrison told the more than 30 participants in Mlini, Croatia.

“These people don’t know us, and we have to maintain a certain level of distance from them, we can’t be their friends,” he said. “Sometimes we have to convince them that they want to be interviewed by us.”

BIRN’s 14th Summer School brings together journalists from across Central and Eastern Europe for a week of insight and advice from 15 trainers.

Drawing on years of personal experience, Morrison urged the participants to think about “what makes your friends tell you their secrets” and to approach every interview as if they are interviewing themselves. He stressed the need for “confidence, honesty, curiosity and genuine interest in the people and topic”.

Digital infrastructure experts Boris Budini and Redon Skikuli of CryptoParty Tirana continued the day with a workshop looking at the benefits of technology in journalism.

“The intersection of technology and journalism helps us to protect ourselves and our sources, but also to use available tech to do our research and expose abuse of power,” Budini said.

The tech duo treated the participants to a list of tips and tricks in navigating open source intelligence, advanced use of search engines and the filtering of data.

The day continued with parallel group sessions on advanced data journalism, digital security and how to search the dark web. The day ended with workshops on mental health.

Call for Applications: Two-Day Training Course on Investigative Reporting and Fact-Checking

BIRN Kosovo has opened a new call for applications for its second two-day training course on investigative reporting and fact-checking, as part of the EU-funded project ‘Strengthening Quality News and Independent Journalism in the Western Balkans and Turkey II’.

BIRN Kosovo has opened a new call for applications for the second two-day training course on investigative reporting and fact-checking, as part of the EU-funded project ‘Strengthening Quality News and Independent Journalism in the Western Balkans and Turkey II’.

​​Fake news and well-planned disinformation campaigns have affected elections in both established and emerging democracies recently, undermining international responses to crises like the COVID-19 pandemic and the conflicts worldwide. Disinformation and fake news are a global problem that has recently affected Western Balkan nations as well.

Fake news is spreading more widely on social media as a result of the conflicts taking place currently, as nations aim to gain more sway over one another in the area. Aside from the conflicts, regional media outlets have taken advantage of any chance to disseminate false information, especially when it comes to the dynamics among the Western Balkan nations.

As one of the only media organisations in Kosovo that is part of the International Fact-Checking Network, the mission of BIRN Kosovo is to extend its fact-checking policies and knowledge to other national and regional media outlets.

This training course will help tackle fake news and unverified reporting by helping journalists learn how to spot fake news and provide verified information that adheres to journalistic standards. The knowledge delivered will be of a practical nature and will draw on the unique experiences of journalists who have successfully developed such skills in similar environments.

BIRN will invite different regional and international media professionals to administer the training course and share their knowledge and experience with the participants. 

Note:

Following the training, participants will have the opportunity to be part of a Fellowship Program for writing articles on cross-border investigations and fact-checking.

 Who can apply?

Final-year journalism students, recent graduates, and young and professional journalists from the Western Balkan countries including Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, Montenegro, North Macedonia, and Serbia.

How to apply?

All applications should be submitted in English before September 15, 2024, at midnight Central European Time to [email protected] along with the following documents:

  • Applicant’s CV
  • Motivation Letter (up to 500 words)

Applicants who do not have any published work can submit their student assignments from practical courses in journalism. The motivation letter should provide information regarding the applicants’ opinion and knowledge on the topic and should not exceed 400 words.

Location:

The training will take place in Kosovo. Details regarding the specific location, agenda and accommodation will only be provided to selected participants.

Deadline for applications: 12:00, Central European Time, on September 15, 2024

Date of the training course: 11-13 October 2024

Remarks:

Travel costs and accommodation will be covered by BIRN.

BIRN Summer School Day 2: Mission Investigate, AI and Forming Storylines

During the second day of BIRN’s Summer School of Investigative Reporting, participants had a chance to gain insights into forming and running an investigation and the challenges posed by artificial intelligence.

The second day of BIRN’s Summer School of Investigative Reporting in Mlini, Croatia on Tuesday started with a session on investigations at the Scandinavian Broadcast Service.

Journalists with the Swedish public broadcaster, Maria Georgieva and Ali Fegan, shared details about a TV programme focusing on investigative journalism called Mission Investigate and how they create the story from start to finish.

Georgieva said that when forming the idea “it is all about asking the right questions in the beginning”.

The Scandinavian team broadcasts around 35 investigations each year. They said they receive “30,000-40,000 emails with tips and ideas” each year, of which almost all are processed by the team.

“We are still one of the few PBS services that have a landline which you can call,” Fegan said.

Fegan and Georgieva shared details on the story selection process, how to “bulletproof” the idea, and how to make sure that the story is completed.

“Most of the stories we do are reporter-driven, which means that they first of all have to have a ‘spark’ for the story. Then we have the demand of the audience, and the rest is what we as a group decide deserves to be investigated,” Fegan added.

Lead trainer Blake Morrison, investigative projects editor with Reuters in New York, continued the day with a session on generating story ideas and how to investigate specific topics and areas.

As Morrsion said that “generating ideas is the hardest”, before explaining his process of finding a good story, sharing tips and tricks from his fruitful career.

“Consider how to integrate these tips into your work schedule,” he said, adding that one of the most important steps is to gain an editor’s support in writing the story, but also their encouragement to help you succeed with the story.

“You need to be your best advocate by developing greater expertise in your beat and by changing your line of sight to look for bigger, more impactful stories. This will make you indispensable,” Morrison added.

Professor in data journalism at Columbia University Journalism School, Jonathan Soma, gave a workshop on how to navigate the challenges of using artificial intelligence (AI) tools in journalism. Soma warned many AI tools had what he called “a three percent hallucination rate” whereby they make up or construct a certain amount of content, even when working with predetermined text or documents.

Soma’s session also looked at large language models, or LLMs. He said they “are flawed at everything they do, and it’s only by a strange, strange accident that we find them to be useful.”

Soma emphasised that AI tools can and should be used, “but only for error-resilient tasks.”

Georgieva and Fegan ended the day by sharing their personal experiences in running months-long cross-border investigations, sharing tips and tricks on how to approach such a task.

BIRN’s Annual Summer School Kicks Off in Croatia

The latest edition of BIRN’s summer school brings together almost 35 journalists from across Central and Eastern Europe for a week of investigative reporting training with a focus on collaborative, cross-border stories.

BIRN kicked off the 14th edition of its Summer School of Investigative Reporting on Monday on the Croatian coast with insight and advice shared by experienced and award-winning journalists.

The week-long summer school in Mlini, near Dubrovnik, brings together almost 35 participants from Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, North Macedonia, Serbia, Uzbekistan, Ukraine, Georgia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria and Poland in polishing their skills in investigative journalism and mastering new ones.

Opening the event, BIRN regional director Milka Domanovic said the selection process was “becoming harder each year”.

“We would like to wish you a successful week and invite you to take this opportunity to master and learn new skills and to network with each other,” Domanovic said.

The participants began hearing from some of the 15 trainers who will present their insights into investigative journalism techniques, digital security, artificial intelligence, visual storytelling, investigating war crimes and how to take care of mental wellbeing on the job.

Lead trainer Blake Morrison, investigative projects editor with Reuters in New York, said he hoped the participants will leave the school “inspired”.

“Inspired, first of all, to do cross-border investigative journalism and master their skills,” he said. “Also, our goal is to inspire them to connect with each other, as they can learn from themselves without any trainer’s input.”

After a session with Morrison on creativity in investigative journalism, BIRN editors Ivana Jeremic and Kreshnik Gashi talked about covering online gender-based violence and how to have an impact.

Jeremic said preparation and planning is key, “as we have to provide accurate information and avoid sensationalism and victim blaming”.

The narrative, she said, should centre on “survivors’ experience, needs and perspectives”.

Gashi shared the experiences of BIRN Kosovo in reporting on gender-based violence, including the harassment endured by one of its journalists after her phone number was leaked in a Telegram group.

“She had hundreds of calls and more than 1,000 messages in less than an hour,” Gashi said.

Seven people were arrested as a consequence of a BIRN  investigation into a group in which users shared derogatory videos, ‘deep fake’ images and the personal information of women.

 

Elena Kostyuchenko, an independent Russian journalist and civil rights activist, talked about investigating human rights abuses and the challenges of covering the events since Russia invaded Ukraine.

The first day ended with tips and tricks on digital security for journalists shared by Monika Kutri, a journalist safety specialist with the Croatian Journalists’ Association.

BIRN Rejects Pressure to Delete News Reports About Turkish Fraudster

The Balkan Investigative Reporting Network said it will not take down reports about convicted Turkish fraudster Yasam Ayavefe and described an order from a Turkish court to remove the articles as an attack on media freedom.

The Balkan Investigative Reporting Network (BIRN) said on Thursday that Balkan Insight articles about Yasam Ayavefe will remain online, and described attempts by the convicted fraudster to remove the articles via the Turkish courts as an attempt to silence the truth.

BIRN received an official request on August 7 from the Access Providers Association, a private legal entity that implements court-ordered website access-blocking decisions in Turkey, to remove six about Ayavefe published by Balkan Insight in 2022 and 2023.

The Access Providers Association cited decisions by a court in Nizip in Gaziantep province after a complaint filed by Ayavefe’s lawyers claiming that the articles were not in the public interest.

The articles listed by Ayavefe’s lawyers “do not contribute to the public interest, are not newsworthy, and in this case the requested content should be evaluated within the scope of the right to be forgotten”, the court said on August 7 as it ordered the deletion of the articles within four hours.

Milka Domanovic, BIRN’s regional director, said that the articles will not be deleted and described the attempt by Ayavefe’s lawyers to have them removed via the courts as unacceptable pressure on independent media.

“BIRN stands behind its previous articles about Yasam Ayavefe and refuses to delete them. They are based on facts. Trying to take down our articles in various ways represents an attack on press freedom and attempted online censorship,” said Domanovic.

“Since the publication of an investigation by BIRN’s flagship publication Balkan Insight in 2022, we have been subjected to cyberattacks, fake copyright claims and requests from Ayavefe to delete these articles, and finally we have received a Turkish court order to delete them,” Domanovic added.

She noted that Turkish courts have no jurisdiction over BIRN as a media house based outside Turkey.

“We will not delete those articles for the sake of press freedom and solidarity with our colleagues in Turkey who face online censorship on a daily basis,” she added.

The court also ordered the takedown of a news article published by Free Web Turkey, a platform established by the Media and Law Studies Association, MLSA to monitor online censorship.

The article explained how Ayavefe has used the courts to block online content including official material published by the Turkish police about him. The MLSA article also mentioned BIRN’s case.

Ali Safa Korkut from the MLSA told BIRN that the court decision is a clear example of how the courts are used for censorship.

“This is a tragi-comedy. In Turkey, a person who was subject to an international [Interpol] red notice issued by the Turkish authorities contacted those same Turkish authorities again to block access to posts on official websites and social media accounts,” Korkut explained.

Repeated cyberattacks on BIRN

Illustration: Spoovio

In September 2022, BIRN’s Balkan Insight website and the website of its Greek partner media outlet Solomon came under DDoS attack after the publication of an investigation into how Ayavefe – despite being convicted by a Turkish court in 2017 of defrauding online gamblers and arrested in Greece in 2019 trying to cross the border into Bulgaria on a false passport – got honorary Greek citizenship.

Ayavefe has managed to get hundreds of pieces of online content in Turkey taken down under three court orders. The content that was removed included news articles, social media posts and even the official Turkish Police website material and social media posts.

Ayavefe’s representative in July 2023 also asked for the removal of BIRN’s articles and offered financial incentives in return for compliance. “My client Dr Yasam Ayavefe has an advertising company, if you help us in this case we can provide advertising services to your organisation, so you can grow to a bigger organisation. We would love to cooperate with you,” the representative wrote.

BIRN rejected the offer and repeated demands to remove the articles about Ayavefe.

Following this, BIRN received dozens of copyright infringement complaints via a hosting company that leases out servers, submitted by different people and websites.

The complaints claimed that they originally published the BIRN articles; however, the alleged authors had merely republished the BIRN articles, by changing the dates. BIRN reported these fake copy rights claims and none of the BIRN’s articles on Ayavefe was removed by hosting companies.

BIRN’s website was hit by another DDoS attack in December 2023 after it published news about the false copyright claims over two of its articles concerning Ayavefe. DDoS attacks aim to disrupt the normal traffic of a targeted server, service or network.

Border Graves Project Shortlisted for Investigative Award

The Border Graves Investigation, a major cross-border journalism project that included Barbara Matejcic’s story for BIRN about refugee deaths in Croatia, is among ten shortlisted nominees for the annual IJ4EU Impact Award.

The Border Graves Investigation, a cross-border project that confirmed over 1,000 unmarked graves of migrants over the last ten years across Europe, has been shortlisted for the IJ4EU Impact Award, organised by Investigative Journalism for Europe, a fund that supports cross-border watchdog journalism in and around the European Union.

One of the stories produced as part of the Border Graves was Barbara Matejcic’s investigation ‘Nomen Nescio: Dying En Route to Europe, Buried Without a Name’, which was published on BIRN’s flagship outlet Balkan Insight.

“People are losing their lives in various ways trying to reach the European Union. Our team of eight freelance journalists in the countries on the external borders of the European Union wanted to investigate how these deaths occur, especially when they are the result of the EU border regime – pushbacks and police violence in Croatia, for example,” said Matejcic.

“We investigated what happens to the bodies, what is the identification process, burial and whether the families find out what happened to their loved ones. We worked for six months in Greece, Italy, Spain, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Poland and Lithuania,” she added.

During their work on this investigation, the team found out there was little information and a lot of ambiguity about unidentified dead migrants, and they came across a lot of obstacles.

“There is no official data at the national levels let alone a unique EU database of dead and missing persons. That’s why we did a lot of fieldwork visiting cemeteries and collecting data,” explained Matejcic.

“Also, we exposed that identification is often incomplete and information about the deceased is difficult to obtain for relatives, which is why many never find out what happened to their loved ones and where their burial place is,” she added.

The project’s cross-border team confirmed 1,015 unmarked graves of migrants in 65 cemeteries buried over the last ten years across Spain, Italy, Greece, Malta, Poland, Lithuania, France, and Croatia.

The IJ4EU Impact Award award honours excellence in collaborative journalism in Europe. An independent jury chaired by Maltese journalist Paul Caruana Galizia will choose three winning teams.

Winners will be announced on September 26, at the end of IJ4EU’s UNCOVERED Conference, hosted this year by the iMEdD International Journalism Forum in Athens, Greece. Each winner will receive 5,000 euros.

Media Innovation Europe: Independence Through Sustainability

BIRN Hub

The project focuses on enhancing newsrooms in the Western Balkans and Visegrad regions to engage citizens in reporting by using a digital audience engagement tool. This tool will crowdsource information from citizens and produce stories of local importance, attracting new and diverse audiences, including women, young people, and marginalised groups.

Summary

Media Innovation Europe is being implemented in 10 countries across the Visegrad and Western Balkans regions. The project aims to support independent media outlets in their efforts to engage different communities in reporting. It seeks to foster collaboration and partnership, promote media freedom and integrity, and encourage media outlets to serve as watchdogs, thereby promoting active citizenship. Communities play an essential role in shaping media content and amplifying diverse voices, including women, young people, marginalised groups, and ethnic minorities. Fifteen selected media outlets will learn to capture citizens’ engagement using BIRN’s digital tool and prepare impactful stories with the support of mentors.

Donor

European Commission, Creative Europe

Main Activities

Audience Engagement:

  1. Grant funding for audience engagement and content production support.
  2. Training in audience engagement for selected media outlets.
  3. Mentoring support for the production of audience engagement content and cross-border collaborative stories for journalists.
  4. Access to BIRN’s tool for audience engagement for journalists and media outlets.
  5. Production of stories based on audience engagement using BIRN’s tool.
  6. Support for Media Innovation Festivals for media practitioners, entrepreneurs, and leaders on trends and innovations.

Target Groups

Independent media outlets in the Western Balkans and Visegrad countries.

Main Implementer

International Press Institute

Partners

Thomson Media and The Fix Foundation

Meet the Mentors Strengthening Albania’s Media Landscape: Besar Likmeta

Besar Likmeta has extensive experience in journalism, having worked in print, television and electronic media in both the US and Albania since 2003.

In 2009, Besar received the CEI/SEEMO Award for Outstanding Merits in Investigative Journalism and in 2010 he was runner-up for the Global Shining Light Award, presented at the Global Investigative Journalism Conference in Geneva. Besar studied philosophy at the University of North Florida.

He has been editor of BIRN Albania since 2007 and is the country correspondent for Balkan Insight. He’s also a mentor in the Western Balkans Media for Change project. Find out more about this important role in strengthening Albania’s media landscape.

  1. What type of support do you offer media outlets?

The support we offer to partner local media outlets includes all the stages of designing and implementing an Engaged Community Reporting (ECR) program. This ranges from the design and planning of activities to the selection of reporting topics, technical and editorial expertise for the drafting of effective questionnaires, call outs for distribution planning, data analysis and visualization, storytelling and editing.

  1. What does the mentorship process look like?

Our mentorship process is designed to provide knowledge-sharing and know-how between BIRN editors and mentors and Western Balkans Media for Change implementing partners, working closely with journalists and editors in local newsrooms. The mentoring process is based on BIRN’s built experience in supporting newsrooms in implementing ECR programs and is also continuously updated with the data – the responses and the experiences we crowdsource from each partner newsroom every month. Mentorship involves continuous in-person and online communication with journalists and editors, lessons learned analysis on thematic call-outs and published stories, videos, reels and podcasts.

  1. What were the biggest successes achieved through this type of mentorship?

As mentors, we collect data on what works and what does not work in Citizens Engagement Reporting and share it with our partners. This in turn arms them with the practical ability to engage diverse communities – from cancer patients to beach dwellers – in their reporting in order to produce rich, data-driven and compelling storytelling for their media. Our biggest success through this mentorship program has been the engagement generated from some of the implementing partners, which has exceeded expectations – and the excitement of journalists and editors to use the ECR tool.

  1. What reactions did you receive from the media outlets supported through this process?

Most media outlets are surprised how well the ECR tool works and are glowing from the response in reaching diverse communities and the possibility of engaging them in their reporting, which builds up trust between the media outlets and its readers.

The Western Balkans Media for Change project is funded by the UK government and implemented by the British Council in partnership with the Balkan Investigative Reporting Network, Thomson Foundation and The International NGO Training and Research Centre, INTRAC.

Meet the People Behind BIRN: Marija Vasilevska

Based in Skopje, North Macedonia, Marija Vasilevska joined the BIRN team in September 2022 as a Project Manager for Business Development.

Marija brought to BIRN more than 15 years of working experience in the NGO sector, nationally, regionally and internationally. Her extensive working experience includes coordination and projection of actions in media, education and human rights. She is passionate about developing projects and programmes that involve innovative approaches, different stakeholders and digitalization, focused on ensuring a long-term impact on society. Marija is also highly experienced in monitoring and evaluation and in quality assurance in higher education.

She holds a Master’s in finance and financial Law and a Bachelor’s degree in law obtained from Justinian Primus – Skopje. Currently, she is a PhD student at the University of American College – Skopje, focusing her research on the quality of education in relation to macroeconomic development. Let’s meet her!

  1. You had more than 15 years of experience in the NGO sector when you joined the BIRN team in September 2022 as a Project Manager for Business Development. What did you expect from BIRN, and what did you get from the organisation?

My first contact with BIRN was at BIRN`s Summer School in 2012. Back then, I was a radio host and journalist involved in producing TV stories for marginalized and vulnerable groups of citizens in North Macedonia. After the Summer School, I continued cooperating with BIRN Macedonia in different capacities.

Ten years later, in 2022, I applied to become an official part of the BIRN team. I expected to work with people who would motivate me always to strive for excellence, a place of mutual learning with an amazing team, and an opportunity to contribute to a greater cause through my hard work.

Being part of BIRN is a significant and serious commitment for me. It requires high-quality work and a lot of dedication, as BIRN maintains much higher standards than most other organisations.

To be honest, I received much more than I expected. Today, I can honestly say that BIRN has given me a dream team, friends and colleagues with whom I enjoy working hard. I have received support to realize my ideas, a place where I can make meaningful changes, and the opportunity to continuously grow professionally, so that I can contribute even more to the organisation.

  1. Recently, you were appointed Programme Manager for Capacity Building and Strengthening of Independent Media. Tell us more about this position.

BIRN’s field of work is focused on the following topics:

1) Investigative journalism;

2) Transitional justice;

3) Capacity building and Strengthening of Independent Media;

4) Digital rights (specifically in relation to human rights).

The Capacity Building and Strengthening of Independent Media programme aims to build capacities for journalists, media outlets and CSOs from Southeast Europe. Through the projects integrated in this programme BIRN supports media and journalists in the production of quality and citizens-engaged content. Through this programme, the Network leverages its extensive experience in investigative and cross-border journalism to share valuable insights with other media outlets and journalists. The final aim is to build a robust system that supports a sustainable and independent media sector. The programme has been quite successful so far. I have “big shoes to fill”, but I promise to give it my best effort.

  1. What is the most challenging thing in your work?

My colleagues struggle to understand the Macedonian version of the BHS language. 🙂 Sometimes we struggle with my version of the BHS language, but I am learning the language fast, just like they are. In addition to this, a real struggle is to provide a wider and unified approach for all Western Balkan countries, since every country is unique and the context in each of them is changing daily. Because of this, we seek to establish a standard that can be adapted to the specific needs of each country but seen through the perspective of cross-border work for higher impact.

  1. What is the most satisfying part of your job?

The most satisfying part of my job is being in a dynamic learning environment where I am continuously acquiring new skills that enhance my professional growth. What makes this journey even more inspiring is working alongside a group of strong, motivated women who are focused, supportive and solution oriented. Their unwavering support makes me feel like an integral part of not just a team but a family.

  1. What are the Capacity Building and Strengthening of Independent Media programme’s plans for the future?

I see BIRN as a knowledge-sharing organisation based on the experience that the whole Network has. Sometimes I think we are not even fully aware of all the capacities that are circling around the Network. We must contribute towards a higher level of independence in the media sector in the targeted region with our work. Ensuring continuous opportunities for capacity building for as many as possible journalists, media workers and media outlets is something for which we are aiming.

In the upcoming period, I will strive to steer the programme towards innovative and certified capacity-building approaches for media professionals and journalists. My goal is to foster the development of an ecosystem that supports an independent media sector. To achieve this, I plan to create a comprehensive catalogue of capacity-building activities tailored to the evolving needs of journalists. Additionally, I aim to establish new partnerships across various sectors, including academia and the IT start-up community.

  1. What are you proudest of regarding your work in BIRN?

The team of project management staff and editors/mentors with whom I cooperate on a daily level. Our team of editors/mentors and their professional approaches are shaping media sectors in all Western Balkan countries. They are leading the media sector towards ethical and quality reporting. Last year, randomly, I was part of a Summer School at which a young journalist approached me and told me that the mentorship of one of our editors/mentors had been more effective than his professional education. So, yes, I am most proud of the editors/mentors with whom I am working, and I enjoy seeing the seeds of their work growing in impactful and change-making stories.