Linked with e-learning plans for Africa, with Africa and Poverty, with Self-help Assistance Programm ASAP, with TO LIFT AFRICA OUT OF POVERTY, and with Corruption linked to poverty.
He says: « I read and watched plays written by Soyinka, I also used to read the Lagos Daily and I always dreamt of being a columnist one day ».
And: « Africa was in its independence mode and many were going back to celebrating their cultures, these writers were very creative and inspiring, full of our flourishing African culture and we looked to them as our heroes ».
He says also: « Newswatch took a stance against the ruling elite, We started crusading against this kind of rule by denouncing it in our editorials ».
Dele Olejede – Nigeria
Dele Olojede won the 2005 Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting for his series of stories examining the aftermath of the genocide in Rwanda. The series was published in New York Newsday, where he worked for more than 16 years until December 2004. He was foreign editor at the paper, and prior to that served as Africa Correspondent, based in Johannesburg, during the early 1990s. He also was the newspaper’s Asia Bureau Chief, based in Beijing, and had covered the United Nations as well as a variety of other assignments over a 25-year career that began in his native Nigeria. He has reported from more than 70 countries and his work has been published in more than 100 newspapers and magazines around the world. Olojede was graduated from the University of Lagos with a bachelor of science in mass communication, and he received a master of science degree in journalism from Columbia University in New York. He also completed a program in media management at the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University. He was a member of the board of the National Press Foundation in Washington, and twice served on the jury of the Pulitzer Prizes as well as the Alicia Paterson Foundation. He currently is executive chairman of Timbuktu Media, a startup based in Johannesburg and Lagos. He and his wife, Amma, have two daughters. (See on journalism.co.za).