Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Feds Fund Media Project Aimed At Improving Coverage Of Human Rights Issues

IANS, 03 May, 2019 09:14 PM

    TORONTO — The federal government is investing millions of dollars in a project meant to improve international media coverage of human rights issues, particularly those impacting women and girls.


    Gender Equality Minister Maryam Monsef says Ottawa will contribute $11.7 million over four years to the Canada World project led by Journalists for Human Rights.


    JHR says the project will see journalists from major Canadian news outlets partner with reporters based in the Middle East, Kenya and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.


    Participating Canadian news outlets include the CBC, the National Post, Corus/Global TV, Bell Media/CTV News, and the Aboriginal People's Television Network.


    Both the government and JHR say the program will improve journalism training in the target regions and allow local reporters to shed light on human rights abuses.


    They say the program is especially geared towards covering human rights issues related to women and girls, as well as helping to boost their participation in public life.


    "Women bring a unique perspective and voice to anything they do and this is no different in the media sector," Monsef said in a statement. "When women's voices are heard, different stories start to be told."


    Rachel Pulfer, executive director of JHR, said the Canada World initiative is the largest media development project the organization has undertaken, adding it's attracted a uniquely deep pool of Canadian journalists to take part.


    "There has never been a media development program that has harnessed such an impressive range of top media companies and minds to protect women and girls, while reinforcing Canada's strong commitment to the freedom of the press worldwide."


    The announcement comes on World Press Freedom Day, an initiative led by UNESCO. This year's theme involves exploring the relationship between journalism and election in an age when disinformation is increasingly prevalent.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    'We Want To Be Good Neighbours:' Pot Plant Deals With Stink At Edmonton Airport

    'We Want To Be Good Neighbours:' Pot Plant Deals With Stink At Edmonton Airport
    Aurora Cannabis, the company that operates the facility, is going to great lengths to mitigate any pot odour wafting over to the airport, as well as local hotels and outlet stores.  

    'We Want To Be Good Neighbours:' Pot Plant Deals With Stink At Edmonton Airport

    B.C. Sikh Men Put on Canada's Secret No-Fly List, Challenge Its Constitutionality In Court

    B.C. Sikh Men Put on Canada's Secret No-Fly List, Challenge Its Constitutionality In Court
    It is viewed as the Trudeau-led federal government’s “attempt to appease” the Narendra Modi-led Indian government post Canadian PM’s controversial February 2018 Indian sojourn.

    B.C. Sikh Men Put on Canada's Secret No-Fly List, Challenge Its Constitutionality In Court

    Canada, International Allies Butt Heads Over Focus On White Supremacism

    Canada has been butting heads with some of its closest allies over the extent to which rising white supremacy at home and abroad poses a global threat, federal insiders say.

    Canada, International Allies Butt Heads Over Focus On White Supremacism

    Manitoba Man Who Shot At Mounties, Wounding One, Sentenced To 18 Years

    MINNEDOSA, Man. — A Manitoba man who shot at two RCMP officers and left one with severe injuries has been given an 18-year prison sentence.

    Manitoba Man Who Shot At Mounties, Wounding One, Sentenced To 18 Years

    BC Study Suggests There's Strong Support For Policies That Encourage Vaccination

    BC Study Suggests There's Strong Support For Policies That Encourage Vaccination
    Lead author Julie Bettinger, an investigator with the Vaccine Evaluation Centre at BC Children's Hospital, said governments across Canada would benefit from seeking input on attitudes toward vaccine-preventable diseases before implementing policies that could backfire.

    BC Study Suggests There's Strong Support For Policies That Encourage Vaccination

    'Grabher' Licence Plate Not Dangerous, Former Sex Researcher Tells N.S. Court

    Debra Soh, a science journalist and former academic researcher, told Nova Scotia Supreme Court that the word would have no impact on the average, socially adjusted person.

    'Grabher' Licence Plate Not Dangerous, Former Sex Researcher Tells N.S. Court