70 Years of Reporting the World from the UN in Geneva ACANU marks 70 years of supporting UN-accredited journalists Anniversary celebrations in February with large-scale exhibit at the Palais des Nations and awards ceremony for the first-ever ACANU Prizes GENEVA, Switzerland -- February 7, 2019: When the Geneva Association of United Nations Correspondents (ACANU) was founded on February 9, 1949, it immediately embraced the values of freedom, fairness and respect for diversity espoused by a United Nations still in its infancy.
Over the past seven decades, ACANU has strived to support and protect journalists accredited to the UN in Geneva, pushing for fair and equal access to information, and defending the freedom and prestige of this highly diverse press corps.
"Today, at a time when both the media and the international institutions that ACANU members cover face increasing hostility and attack, our association is as important as ever," ACANU President Nina Larson said.
"We are determined to continue championing and highlighting the vital role played by a free and vibrant media in covering the work done by the United Nations and other international organisations based in Geneva, and defending UN-accredited journalists' Geneva right to freely access, scrutinise and challenge information provided through the international bodies and by states," she added.
To mark its anniversary, ACANU has created a large-scale exhibit* celebrating the work done by journalists from a wide range of countries to highlight, explain and critically assess some of the most important and memorable international events that have taken place in Geneva over the past 70 years.
ACANU members have been at the forefront of covering such monumental events as the Geneva conference ending the Indochina war in 1954, Che Guevara’s address before the UN Conference on Trade and development in 1964, the Geneva Summit between Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev in 1985 effectively ending the Cold War, as well as peace conferences to end the Iran-Iraq war, the Yugoslavia conflict, Iraq's occupation of Kuwait, and more recently the peace talks for Syria, Cyprus, Yemen and Libya, not to mention the Iran nuclear talks.
Our members have also been there as witnesses to visits by such personalities as Nelson Mandela, Yassir Arafat, Bill Clinton and Aung San Suu Kyi, and three popes.
The exhibit featuring photographs of these events and others, along with archival documents and communications equipment showing the evolution of our profession, will open on February 18 in the Salle des Pas Perdus at the Palais des Nations in Geneva, and will run through February 28.
As part of ACANU's anniversary celebrations, the association has also created two new international journalism awards: The ACANU Prize for Excellence in Reporting and the ACANU Prize for Reporting on Human Rights Issues.
These awards are meant to honour outstanding reporting on the international organisations based in Geneva, including on refugees, migration, health, labour and global trade, as well as on human rights.
An independent, international jury (
https://acanu.ch/the-jury) has designated the winners, whose names will be announced ahead of the awards ceremony**, which will take place at the Maison de La Paix on Monday, February 25, at 7:00 pm. It will be followed by a high-level on-stage panel discussion on the topic of Press Freedom and Journalists Under Attack.
About ACANU: The Association des Correspondants Auprès des Nations Unies à Genève (ACANU) was founded in February 1949, just three years after The League of Nations was dissolved and the United Nations came into being.
Today, ACANU counts around 120 members who are accredited to cover the UN in Geneva for news organisations around the world.
Contacts: Tamer Aboalenin, ACANU Secretary,
acanu.secretary@acanu.chNina Larson, ACANU President,
nina.larson@afp.comLaurent Sierro, ACANU Vice President,
laurent.sierro@keystone-ats.ch* The ACANU exhibit was made possible thanks to generous funding and support from the United Nations Information Service, the United Nations International Telecommunications Union, the missions of Argentina, the European Union, France, Greece, Kazakhstan, Kuwait, Oman, Switzerland, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates and the United States.
** ACANU is organising its Awards Ceremony and onstage discussion in cooperation with the Graduate Institute and the Club Diplomatique de Genève, and the event was made possible thanks to much appreciated funding from Swiss national and local authorities, support from the AGIR group, and with a generous contribution from the Maison Caran d’Ache.
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