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“Latin
America and the Millennium
Development Goals” Journalism Award |
 |
466 articles from Latin America compete
for the
Millennium Development Goals
Journalism Award
A total of 466 articles was registered
as of the July 15th close of the call for the award,
organized by the United Nations Development Program
(UNDP) and the Inter Press Service (IPS) news agency.
The articles arrived from 19 countries
in Latin America and the Caribbean: Argentina (47),
Bolivia (5), Brazil (52), Chile (4), Colombia (34),
Costa Rica (10), Cuba (15), Ecuador (15), El Salvador
(1), Guatemala (20), Honduras (11), Mexico (83), Nicaragua
(2), Panama (41), Paraguay (5), Peru (22), Netherlands
Antilles (4), Uruguay (29) and Venezuela (66).
The stories entered were published in
Spanish, English and Portuguese in print media from
the region between October 1, 2006 and June 30, 2007.
The three best stories will receive prizes of US$5,000,
US$2,500 and US$1,000 respectively, and the five best
will be included in a book that will be published
after the decision is issued.
The jury is made up of the Mexican writer
Carlos Monsiváis; Cuban author Leonardo Padura;
the president of the Foundation for Free Press of
Colombia, María Teresa Ronderos; the CEO of
IPS Mario Lubetkin; and the regional director of the
UNDP for Latin America and the Caribbean, Rebeca Grynspan.
The jury will evaluate the work and announce its decision
before October 1, 2007.
The Latin America and MDG 2007 Journalism
Award seeks to encourage regional media, including
some of the most influential newspapers, to spread
the word about the challenges associated with accomplishing
the MDGs, which include halving poverty by 2015.
The eight goals were adopted in 2000
during the United Nations Millennium Summit by the
heads of government of 189 countries, to eradicate
poverty around the world. This year is the midway
point in the timeline, whose completion date was set
at 2015.
Achieving the goals requires that media
reporting "be more transparent and provide better
information so that the public can demand that their
governments keep the commitments they have made,"
said Rebeca Grynspan, UNDP regional director for Latin
America.