African Longreads

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November 2011

2 posts

Hiding the Real Africa: Why NGOs Prefer Bad News

Rasna Warah, a Kenyan who worked for UN-Habitat before leaving to pursue a writing career, says that exaggerations of need were not uncommon among aid officials she encountered. “They wanted journalists to say ‘Wow.’ They want them to quote your report,” she says. “That means more money for the next report. It’s really as cynical as that.” Western journalists, for their part, tend to be far too trusting of aid officials, according to veteran Dutch correspondent Linda Polman. In her book The Crisis Caravan, she cites as one example the willingness of journalists to be guided around NGO-run refugee camps without asking tough questions about possible corruption or the need for such facilities. She writes, “Aid organizations are businesses dressed up like Mother Teresa, but that’s not how reporters see them.”

Writer: Karen Rothmyer

Length: 2076 words

Source: Columbia Journalism Review

Published: March / April 2011

Nov 25, 2011

After (An) Improbable Rise Nuggets VP Keeps Focus On His African Roots

It started on the outdoor basketball courts in northern Nigeria where 13-year-old Masai Ujiri and his friends began to play for as long as their parents would allow. On Saturdays his mother bought him a copy of Sports Illustrated or Basketball Digest or any American magazine that could help fill his need for basketball. He and his friends watched VHS tapes of NBA games or basketball movies. “All of the films,” said Ujiri, who is now the 40-year-old general manager of the Denver Nuggets. “Come Fly With Me, with Michael Jordan, and The Fish That Saved Pittsburgh, we watched that too.” 

Writer: Ian Thomsen

Length: 1520 words

Source: Sports Illustrated

Published: November 23, 2011

Nov 25, 2011
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