Calls Open for EU Investigative Journalism Award

Investigative stories published from January 1 to December 31, 2019, and related to freedom of expression, rule of law, transparency, abuse of power and fundamental rights, corruption and organised crime are welcome to apply.

The award fund in each country in 2020 (for achievements in 2019) is 10,000 EUR. The first prize will be 5,000 EUR, the second 3,000 EUR, and the third will be 2,000 EUR.

Individuals or groups of journalists are eligible to apply in all journalism forms (print, online, radio and TV) published or broadcast in the media in each country in official, minority or international languages.

Articles eligible for submission must appear in print, online, radio and TV media outlets during the 2019 calendar year.

EU Investigative Journalism Awards in the Western Balkans and Turkey aim to celebrate and promote the outstanding achievements of investigative journalists as well as improve the visibility of quality journalism in the Western Balkans and Turkey.

The awards are a continuation of the ongoing regional EU Investigative Journalism Award in the Western Balkans and Turkey and part of the ongoing project ‘Strengthening Quality News and Independent Journalism in the Western Balkans and Turkey’, funded by the European Union.

The project partners involved all have extensive expertise in the field of media freedom and have been recognised locally and internationally as strong independent media organisations.

The jury for the EU Award comprises media experts, some of them from the project consortia. Others are drawn from the extensive network projects that the consortium members have, such as editors, members of academia and journalists with merits.

The awards will be given annually in all six Western Balkan countries and Turkey.

For more details, deadlines and guidelines please download packages for individual countries below.


To download all necessary documents for North Macedonia in Macedonian click here

To download all necessary documents for North Macedonia in Albanian click here

To download all necessary documents for Montenegro click here

Update: The calls have been postponed until fall this year. All applications received so far will be taken into consideration. We will post more details when available. Thank you for your interest and understanding.

Don’t Miss the March 10 Deadline to Apply to the Fellowship!

If you have an idea for a big story and want to report it to the highest standard, with top-notch editorial support and a generous expenses budget, apply for the Fellowship for Journalistic Excellence. The deadline for applications is March 10.

After 14 years of supporting journalists across the Balkans, we are now also accepting applications from mid-career journalists in Visegrad Group countries — Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland and Slovakia.

Each year, 10 journalists are chosen by an independent jury to receive a €3,000 bursary, close editorial supervision and mentoring and the chance to be published in the most influential regional and international media. In addition, the top three articles will receive awards.

The application form, guidelines and further information about the Fellowship are available online at https://balkaninsight.com/fellowship-for-journalistic-excellence/.

To maximise your chances of winning a place on the programme, read these tips from our editors, based on their experience reviewing hundreds of applications. You can also learn about the programme first-hand from last year’s winners.

For more information about the Fellowship and the application process, write to us at [email protected].

Experienced journalists from Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Greece, Hungary, Kosovo, Macedonia, Montenegro, Poland, Romania, Serbia and Slovakia are eligible to apply.

Don’t miss the chance to become part of a growing network of journalists across the region committed to excellence in their profession.

BIRN Bosnia Holds Discussion on Terrorism Prevention Strategy

BIRN Bosnia and Herzegovina held a round-table discussion on February 26 about the implementation of the state strategy for preventing and combatting terrorism and the challenges remaining for Bosnia and Herzegovina prior to the adoption of a new strategy.

Bosnia and Herzegovina has managed to stop people going abroad to fight in foreign conflicts, participants in the round-table discussion were told during the presentation of an analysis of the implementation of the state strategy, which was based on answers from institutions and interviews with those involved in its implementation.

There have been no terrorist attacks in Bosnia and Herzegovina in the past several years, and work on the implementation of the strategy in the period between 2015 and 2020 focused more on combating terrorism than prevention.

Reinout Vos, ambassador of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, which supports BIRN Bosnia and Herzegovina’s project, pointed out that combating terrorism and violent extremism was one of the priorities for Bosnia and Herzegovina, but also for the Netherlands and the European Union.

“It is very important for Bosnia and Herzegovina to continue working on improving its future strategy for combating terrorism and combating violent radicalism and extremism and I consider that experts and participants who were present in this meeting and who showed big enthusiasm for working in this field, as well as the fact that we have new people at the Ministry of Security, will give a new shift to working in this field in the right way,” Vos said.

At a press conference held after the round-table discussion, which was closed to public, BIRN Bosnia and Herzegovina’s director Denis Dzidic said the idea of the event was to present the results of a project in which BIRN Bosnia and Herzegovina followed and reported on the implementation of the state strategy, especially the prevention part, so past experiences and challenges can be used when preparing the new strategy.

He added that the focus was on organising a discussion with participation of everyone who should have been involved in the strategy implementation – representatives of the Bosnian Ministry of Security, which is responsible for implementation of the Strategy, members of the Monitoring Body composed of officials from security agencies, social work centres, the Communications Regulatory Authority and others, “all of whom have certain competencies in the implementation of that strategy”.

According to BIRN’s research, which was presented by journalist Nermina Kuloglija, a clear and comprehensive system of terrorism prevention has not been established in all local communities in the country. Kuloglija said that over the past two years, BIRN Bosnia and Herzegovina has done two extensive analyses of the implementation of the strategy over a one-year period.

“Some of the key findings we have reached indicate that the strategy has not been implemented at all levels, and no money has been allocated in the state budget for its implementation. Unlike Brcko District and Republika Srpska, the government of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina has still not adopted an action plan and we are already talking about the final year of this strategy,” Kuloglija explained.

During the last year of implementation of the existing strategy, Bosnia and Herzegovina will prepare a new one, whose implementation should begin next year. The aim of the discussion was to talk about challenges faced by institutions during the strategy implementation and how to overcome them in the new strategy.

“What our interlocutors said during the preparation of these analyses is that work with returnees from foreign battlefronts will be included in the new strategy, but it has still not been decided how and in what form,” Kuloglija said.

In addition to reporting from all hearings in terrorism cases, BIRN Bosnia and Herzegovina has produced four episodes of ‘TV Justice’ on the subject – How Islamic Extremism Destroyed a Bosnian Family, Lack of Prisons Response to Radicalization Problem, Bosnia Nervously Awaits ISIS Women and Children’s Return, and Prevention Remains Biggest Challenge to Anti-Terrorism Strategy.

BIRN Bosnia and Herzegovina has published a number of analyses and news on terrorism and radicalism issues over the past few years.

The round table for representatives of international institutions in Bosnia and Herzegovina and relevant domestic institutions for combating terrorism was organised by BIRN Bosnia and Herzegovina as part of its project ‘Contributing to Bosnian Efforts to Combat Radicalisation’, supported through the Fund for Regional Partnership of the Kingdom of the Netherlands.

Fellowship Welcomes New Selection Committee Member

Wojciech Ciesla, a prominent Polish investigative journalist and editor, has joined the Selection Committee of the Fellowship for Journalistic Excellence, the flagship programme of the Balkan Investigative Reporting Network and Erste Foundation.

Alongside six other jury members who have long been stalwarts of the programme, he will help select 10 journalists to take part in this year’s Fellowship, receiving financial and editorial support for original reporting projects.

Ciesla is a member of the Investigate Europe team and co-founder of Fundacja Reporterów, an NGO that trains and supports journalists from Central and Eastern Europe and publishes VSquare, a cross-border investigative journalism platform. He has held various posts at several major Polish newspapers and is winner of the 2009 Grand Press Award for investigative reporting and Andrzej Woyciechowski’s Prize in 2005.

His appointment comes as the Fellowship for Journalistic Excellence (formerly the Balkan Fellowship for Journalistic Excellence) expands its scope beyond the Balkans to include the Visegrad Group countries of Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland and Slovakia.

Other permanent members of the Selection Committee include high-profile journalists from the programme’s media partners: Adelheid Wölfl, Southeast Europe correspondent for Austrian newspaper Der Standard; Florian Hassell, Central and Eastern Europe correspondent for German daily Süddeutschen Zeitung; and Elena Panagiotidis, editor of the debate and opinion section of Swiss daily Neue Zürcher Zeitung.

Remzi Lani, executive director of the Albanian Media Institute, is also a permanent member, as is Milorad Ivanovic, an editor at the Balkan Investigative Reporting Network. Ivanovic, a participant during the first year of the Fellowship in 2007, represents the programme’s alumni network.

The final permanent member of the Selection Committee is Kristof Bender, deputy chairman of the European Stability Initiative, who leads various research projects on EU enlargement and other issues affecting Southeast Europe.

Selection Committee members judge applications and choose fellows based on the quality of their story proposals (relevance, feasibility and originality) and their professional credentials (experience, motivation and approach). For details about the application and selection process, please see our application form and guidelines.

At the end of the programme, the Selection Committee chooses three Fellows to receive awards of 3,000, 2,000 and 1,000 euros based on the quality and originality of their research and reporting.

The deadline for applications for the Fellowship for Journalistic Excellence 2020 is March 10. To maximise your chances of getting a place on the programme, read our editors tips.

If you want to hear firsthand experiences read what other journalists had to say about the Fellowship for Journalistic Excellence.

BIRN Kosovo Gives Students Media Training in Gnjilane/Gjilan

Twenty-five students from the municipality of Gnjilane/Gjilan took part in a training session organised by BIRN Kosovo on February 26.

The session, which was held at Kadri Zeka University in Gnjilane/Gjilan, focused on reporting techniques, media law and the prevention of extremism through the media.

The course was divided into two sessions. The first was held by Labinot Leposhtica, the legal office coordinator at BIRN Kosovo, while the second was overseen by Kreshnik Gashi, anchor of the ‘Justice in Kosovo’ television programme.

Leposhtica explained Kosovo’s media code of ethics and legislation governing the media, and outlined the importance of informing the reader promptly and correctly, following international media standards, and preventing the incitement of discrimination and intolerance.

He also spoke about the need to promote diversity and keep the media transparent, as well as the importance of only reporting once the facts are confirmed and clearly distinguishing between news and op-eds.

Gashi meanwhile explained the process of radicalisation through social media. He also outlined the importance of monitoring debates on social media, and explained methods of reporting on cases of violent extremism.

According to Gashi, to prevent radicalisation through social media, a debate around extremist ideologies should be fostered that provides a counter-narrative to extremism. However, the debate should not, under any circumstances, contain unreliable or false news which misinform the public, he added.

The training session was organised as part of the ‘Consortium: For a Sustainable Community’ project, which is funded by the Global Community Engagement and Resilience Fund, GCERF.

In Their Own Words: Why Apply to This Year’s Fellowship?

As the March 10 deadline looms for applications to the Fellowship for Journalistic Excellence, we asked past participants why journalists should apply to this year’s programme.

Aside from the 3,000-euro bursary, one-on-one mentoring and the chance to attend international career development seminars, they cited the chance to become part of a growing network of journalists across the region committed to excellence in their profession.

Then there is the opportunity to do the best journalism of your life and see your work published  by leading regional and international media. And authors of the top three articles chosen by an international jury will receive awards.

Here’s what last year’s winners had to say.

Ani Sandu, a news anchor and editor at Romanian public radio and a reporter-at-large for quarterly magazine DoR, won first prize for her reporting on what Europol has described as one of Europe’s biggest child trafficking rings.

Her investigation Blind Justice for Romania’s Trafficked Roma Children reveals the scale and complexity of an alleged criminal enterprise in the Romanian town of Tandarei, where investigators say local gangsters have trafficked scores of children into a life of forced criminality.

For Ani, the combination of financial support and one-on-one editorial mentoring was just what she needed to get to grips with a complex and sensitive story.

“During this fellowship I had the time and the resources to do it, and then I had editorial help to write and edit it,” she said. “I see it only as a bonus that in the end my story got one of the awards. If those alone aren’t good enough reasons to apply, then also consider that during the fellowship I got to know other great journalists and I had a really nice time.”

Shkumbin Ahmetxhekaj, an editor at Kosovo Public Television, won second prize for Brain Drain: Will the Last Doctor in Kosovo Turn Out the Lights?

He called the Fellowship an “extraordinary experience” that challenges your approach to research and writing and makes you think about new ways to tackle even familiar stories.

“Above all, it incites the reshaping of the manner of doing journalism, as it takes you out of the boxes that we all settle in,” he said. “It provides the best expertise and in the end it is a journey that has all of what a journalist expects: excitement, pressure and joy. I would definitely do it again!”

The jury also singled out Kostas Zafeiropoulos, an investigative reporter for Greek daily Efimerida ton Sintakton, for his investigation “Alexander the Bot: The Twitter War for the Macedonian Soul”.

For Kostas, participation in the Fellowship was about more than traveling, networking and receiving a generous fund for research plus the much-appreciated stipend. Nor was it only about digging deep into his subject, conducting cross-border research and receiving mentoring from an experienced international editor.

What mattered most, he said, was that he felt he had the full backing of BIRN, “a network that after all these years of running the programme is well equipped to provide what an investigative journalist seeks: financial and legal support, editorial freedom, ethical standards, goal-setting, risk assessments, promotion of our work. Great investigative reporting often turns into bad, hard-to-read articles, which leads to a low level of impact. This programme always has the storytelling aspect at the core of its philosophy.”

The application form, guidelines and further information about the Fellowship are available online. For more information about the programme or the application process, write to us at [email protected]

Professional journalists from Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Greece, Hungary, Kosovo, Macedonia, Montenegro, Poland, Romania, Serbia and Slovakia are eligible to apply.

The Fellowship for Journalistic Excellence (formerly the Balkan Fellowship for Journalistic Excellence) is run by BIRN with support from ERSTE Foundation.

BIRN Bosnia and Serbia’s Ana Curic up for Sigma Awards

A database of Bosnian government official vehicles, a project of the Balkans Investigative Reporting Network in Bosnia and Herzegovina, has been shortlisted for the 2020 Sigma Awards for data journalism. The BIRN BiH project was shortlisted in the Open Data category. Ana Curic, a BIRN journalist from Serbia, has been shortlisted in the Young Journalist category for her overall work in 2019.

The Open Data category shortlists those projects that best “reflect a commitment to making data open, accessible and relevant to other journalists, researchers and general public”.

Fourteen projects were shortlisted in all, including some by media outlets such as ProPublica, the BBC, AFP, Aljazeera, Yahoo News, Pulitzer Center and HuffPost.

The database of official vehicles in Bosnia contains all tenders for the procurement of official limos from 2018 onwards, as well as data on the vehicle fleets of hundreds of institutions and public companies.

It is regularly updated and contains the technical specifications of the vehicles obtained from tender documents, which are otherwise not available to the public in Bosnia during the bidding procedures.

BIRN BiH entered the competition with its article published in January 2019 concerning the costs of procurement of official vehicles during the previous year.

The database is unique, and is often quoted by the media in Bosnia and Herzegovina and the region.

BIRN Serbia journalist Ana Curic, who is shortlisted for the 2020 awards in the Young Journalist category, has been nominated for her whole work in 2019.

She investigated a network of companies connected to the Serbian and Hungarian governments that won almost all street lighting tenders in towns and cities across Serbia.

She also worked on a data-driven story about money laundering in Serbia, based on data from hundreds of verdicts and on information from the prosecution and courts.

In 2019, she became a contributor to a global investigation of the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, ICIJ, called the Implant Files, after collecting and analysing 137 documents about problematic implants used in Serbia, which became part of the International Medical Devices Database.

The Sigma awards are given to best work in the field of data journalism all over the world. Prizes are given for best data-driven reporting, best visualisation, innovation, for best young journalist, open data and for best news application.

There were 510 entries from 66 countries for this year’s awards. The jury of ten international experts picked the best in each category – 82 projects from 31 countries.

The president of the jury this year is Simon Rogers, an award-winning journalist and data journalism teacher at Medill-Northwestern University, in San Francisco and data editor on the News Lab Team at Google.

The Sigma award was instituted by DataJournalism.com, a project of the European Journalism Centre, an international organisation of journalists established in Brussels, with sponsorship provided by Google News Initiative.

The Sigma award winners will be announced by the end of February 2020.

Tips for a Strong Fellowship for Journalistic Excellence Application

Applications are now open for the 2020 edition of our flagship Fellowship programme. The deadline is March 10.

The Fellowship for Journalistic Excellence provides financial and editorial support to professional journalists who have strong ideas for cross-border stories. This year’s theme is the Rule of Law.

Mid-career journalists from Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Greece, Hungary, Kosovo, Macedonia, Montenegro, Poland, Romania, Serbia and Slovakia are eligible to apply.

Each year, 10 journalists are chosen through open competition to receive a €3,000 bursary, close editorial supervision and mentoring, and the chance to attend international career development seminars and be published in the most influential regional and international media. In addition, the top three articles chosen by an international jury will receive awards.

So how do you maximise your chances of winning a place on the programme? Here are some tips from our editors, based on reviewing hundreds of applications:

  1. Look at Fellowship stories from previous years.If the theme of your story has been covered by the Fellowship in the last three years, make sure your story has a sharp, new angle. In other words, your story should present the familiar theme through a fresh lens, perhaps even forcing us to question what we thought we knew. (You can find previous years’ stories online in the stories archive)
  2. Be as specific as possible. Don’t just say you want to look at a broad subject; say what in particular you want to explore. For example, not just “migration” but “changes in migration between country X and country Y in the last five years”. And tell us howyou plan to do it and why that matters.
  3. Do your pre-research.You’re not expected to research your entire story but do as much as you can to give a sense of what you expect to show. A proposal that says “I want to find out what’s happening with X” is not as strong as one that says “I want to find out what’s happening with X and my research so far suggests this is the answer and this is why”.
  4. Tell us what’s new. Make sure to include what’s new about your proposal, compared to other media reporting on the subject. What do you hope to reveal or highlight? Why will this be interesting/important to readers?
  5. Remember the investigative/analytical element. Your story does not have to be a hard-core investigation but it should be more than just descriptive. It should show not just what’s happening but why it’s happening. Make clear what you will investigate or analyse — and how. For an investigative story, this might mean obtaining documents. For an analytical story, it might mean analysing data and/or talking to academic experts. But…
  6. Keep it journalistic. The Fellowship features seminars and mentoring and insists on the highest standards of accuracy but it is not an academic programme. It exists to help journalists improve their skills and produce a high-quality piece of journalism, not an abstract academic article. Your story should hold the attention of inquisitive readers all over the world, and not just in your country or region.
  7. Whatever happens, don’t be downhearted. Every year there are more outstanding proposals than there are places on the Fellowship. Don’t take it personally or regret the work you put in if you’re not selected. The Fellowship is such a great opportunity that it’s worth giving it your best shot. If your proposal is strong but isn’t chosen, you may be able to publish the story elsewhere.

The application form, guidelines and further information about the Fellowship are available online at https://balkaninsight.com/fellowship-for-journalistic-excellence/

For more information about the programme and the application process, write to us at [email protected]

Montenegro: Call for Investigative Story Pitches

Do you have an idea for a big story in the public interest? Do you want to explore topics relevant for Montenegro? Do you want to report your story to the highest standards, with training and a quality editorial mentoring from the country and the region that let you explore your subject in depth? Would you like your story to be published in the region, translated into English and to reach readers even more widely?

If the answer to these questions is ‘yes’, now is the time to submit your ideas. The candidates with the best proposals will undergo a training, to be held in Montenegro in the end of March 2020.

The training will be followed by a selection process. Three candidates with the best ideas, journalistic skills and knowledge will implement their investigative projects, with a close supervision and mentoring of the editorial team from the country and the region.

After completion of the investigation, all stories will be published at the websites of CIN-CG and BIRN, as well as in a special bilingual publication and e-book.

All journalists from Montenegro who have interest and experience in investigative journalism are eligible to apply. Apart from the training, mentoring and editorial support, the selected applicants will receive € 1,000 bursary for their stories (reduced by approximately 9% tax).

Applications should be submitted by March 4th, 2020 to: [email protected]. The application form is available online at www.cincg.me.

Should you have any additional questions, please send them to: [email protected] or [email protected].

Arita Suhodolli

Arita completed her Bachelor’s degree in Public Policy and Management with a sub-branch in International Relations at Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT Kosovo).

She has worked for RIT Kosovo’s Library and Administration Departments, as well as in the marketing industry for ISO Standards certification companies. She is currently pursuing a Master’s degree in Management at Universum College.