F5.5G Leap-forward Development of Broadband in Africa The Africa Broadband Forum 2024 (BBAF 2024) was successfully held in Cape Town, South Africa recently, under…
Schoolkids to take over News24 on Youth Day
This is pretty cool. A group of schoolkids will get to experience one of South Africa’s biggest online newsrooms on Thursday as they help edit News24.
The news site is bringing the school children in as part of its commemoration of the 40th anniversary of the Soweto Uprising.
“Forty years ago, hundreds of Soweto students lost their lives at the hands of apartheid police for protesting against the forced introduction of Afrikaans as a language of tuition at all schools,” says Adriaan Basson, Editor of News24. “We wanted to acknowledge their bravery and sacrifice by taking an honest look at what the struggles of today’s youth are. And the best way to do that is through the eyes of South Africa’s school children.”
News24 has asked sixteen scholars from high schools in Gauteng, the Western and Eastern Cape, KwaZulu-Natal and the Free State to write essays on what their generation’s biggest struggles are. The platform will publish these prominently on their website, alongside short video interviews with the learners that visit our newsrooms.
“June 16, 1976, changed the course of South Africa’s history and we wanted to honour that by doing something different this year,” added Basson.
“Thousands of brave children, led by Tsietsi Mashinini, stood up against the oppressive apartheid regime and demanded quality education. They paid a bitterly high price.
Today we are seeing protests of a different kind on university campuses. The youth of 2016 are protesting against high tuition fees and untransformed academic spaces. Unemployment is high and technology is disrupting legacy industries.
We want to hear the voices of this generation and that’s why we’re inviting them into our newsrooms,” says Basson.
The young editors will also get the opportunity to attend News24’s news conferences and give input into editorial decisions during Youth Week.
“We specifically asked the Soweto schools that were central to the 1976 protests – Morris Isaacson High School, Naledi High School and Orlando West High School – to nominate pupils to participate in the project. At least half of the participants will be from schools in Soweto,” said Basson.