Sahara Reporters
Type | News agency |
---|---|
Format | Online |
Founded | 2006 |
Language | English |
Website | saharareporters.com |
Sahara Reporters is an online news agency based in New York City that focuses on promoting citizen journalism by encouraging everyday people to report stories about corruption, human rights abuses and other political misconduct in Nigeria. A frontier news source for advocacy journalism Sahara Reporters has been referred to as the “Wikileaks of Africa” by The Daily Beast.[1]
History
Based in New York City, Sahara Reporters was founded in 2006 by Nigerian political activist Omoyele Sowore. Sahara Reporters is supported by grants donated by the Ford Foundation which has donated $175,000 to the organization over the past two years. Sahara Reporters has also received a $450,000 grant from The Omidyar Foundation.[1][2]
Since 2006, Sahara Reporters has published over 5,000 reports.
During the presidency of former Nigerian President Yar’adua, Sahara Reporters were the primary Nigerian news agency to feature detailed information about Yar’adua’s health status as well as his whereabouts.[2]
In December 2009, Sahara Reporters drew worldwide attention by being the first news source to identify and publish the photo of Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, known more commonly as the “underwear bomber”, who is a suspected terrorist accused of attempting to blow-up Northwest Airlines Flight 253 on Christmas Day by detonating a plastic bomb that exploded in his underwear.[2]
Sahara Reporters has gained a significantly large following both in Nigeria and amongst Nigerians abroad as no other Nigerian news agency could operate with the same level of transparency for fear of government action.[3] Although Sahara Reporters report from New York and are protected by the First Amendment, both Omoyele Sowore and the organization have received various threats from individuals whose illegal activities have been exposed on the Sahara Reporters website, as well as the Nigerian government.
See also
References
- 1 2 Shenon, Philip (12 August 2010). "Africa's Wikileaks". The Daily Beast. Retrieved 21 November 2011.
- 1 2 3 Spiegal, Brendan (20 November 2011). "From Safety of New York, Reporting on a Distant Homeland". The New York Times. Retrieved 21 November 2011.
- ↑ Thamm, Marianne (5 June 2015). "Nigeria’s favourite satirist goes global after ambushing Robert Mugabe". Daily Maverick - Guardian Africa network (The Guardian). Retrieved 9 March 2016.