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Journalism trainee helps Zambian farmers with mining coverage

by Derek Thorne
Tuesday, 20 May 2014 16:09 GMT

* Any views expressed in this opinion piece are those of the author and not of Thomson Reuters Foundation.

A group of Zambian farmers displaced by a mine have won support from their government – because of a news story by a Thomson Reuters Foundation journalism trainee.

A group of farmers in Zambia who were displaced from their land because of large-scale mining activities have won support from their government – because of a news story written by Paul Shalala, a Thomson Reuters Foundation journalism trainee.

Paul’s story – which he says was greatly informed by the training he received - earned him a nomination in the African Story Challenge, a pan-African project that awards grants and mentoring to journalists with outstanding ideas for multimedia storytelling.

Paul was investigating the impact of multinational mining investments in Zambia on local people. His report looked at a number of mining developments, including the Munali Nickel Mine in the Mazabuka region, in Zambia’s Southern Province.

He spoke to farmers who had been moved to a resettlement area where the soil conditions were far less favourable to growing maize. Other farmers told him about the serious water shortages they faced, caused by the mine’s depletion of the local water table. Click here to view his original documentary, broadcast on Zambia’s TV2 and ZNBC TV channels simultaneously.

As a result of Paul’s story, President Michael Sata sent his deputy agriculture minister to assess the problems in Mazabuka. This led to government action on the issue.

In an account of the story and its impact, Paul Shalala writes: “In January 2014, engineers from the Disaster Management and Mitigation Unit ... started constructing a huge dam for the displaced farmers. It will be used for irrigation and as a source of drinking water for both animals and the displaced farmers.”

There are also plans for an animal breeding centre, and the government set aside funds in its National Budget to run projects that will help the farmers in Mazabuka and elsewhere.

Paul also writes: “Zambia’s Agriculture Research Institute is sending scientists to Mazabuka to collect samples of the soil and subject them to laboratory tests, and will advise the farmers and government what crops or other agricultural activity they can employ in the waterlogged and cracked soils where they have been relocated.”

Paul has taken part in two Thomson Reuters Foundation journalism training courses, a Financial and Economic Reporting course in Kampala in 2012 and an Advanced Governance Reporting course in Johannesburg in 2013. These courses were part of a programme to improve business and financial journalism in Africa funded by Norad

He said: “These courses opened up my mind to investigate the multinational mining companies’ actions and words. [The trainer] David White's advice on the approach to investigative stories really shaped my approach to the story. The impact of the story was massive."

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