How to implement it ? Comment la rendre active ?

jeudi 22 avril 2010

Corruptions & mafias

http://www.gijc2010.ch/fr/programme

Le programme entier en un coup d'œil!

Télécharger le programme complet (avec résumés)

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Les keynotes speakers

Thursday 22nd April

From 07:30 and throughout the day: Registration at CICG

Opening Ceremony and Keynote Speaker: Roberto Saviano

Thursday 22.04 - 09:00 Plenary Conference Room 2

The Italian journalist Roberto Saviano will launch the debates. At only 31 years of age, Roberto Saviano became famousfor his in-depth investigations of the mafia circle, and in particular, that of the Neapolitan Camorra. During months, this writer and competent investigator delved into this dangerous world in order to decode its functioning, its clans, and its economic logic. The result of this work is the publication of a bestselling book entitled "Gomorrah", with five million copies sold, and a cinematic adaptation, in 2008.

Friday 23rd April

Keynote Speaker: Seymour Hersh

Friday 23.04 - 09:00 Plenary Conference Room 2

Seymour Hersh

Moderator: Brant HOUSTON (Investigative News Network, USA)

One of the most awarded investigative journalist, Seymour Hersh has accepted the invitation made by the GIJC 2010 to be a keynote speaker in Geneva. Known as early as 1969 to be the journalist who broke the My Lai scandal in Vietnam, Seymour Hersh has more recently exposed the Abu Graib scandal. Hersh has published eight books, including, most recently, "Chain of Command" which was based on his reporting on Abu Ghraib for The New Yorker. It is the first time that Seymour Hersh will speak at a GIJC.

Saturday 24th April

Keynote speaker: Stephen Engelberg (Propublica, USA)- Financing the future of investigation: Old hands, new tricks in the USA

Saturday 23.04 - 09:00 Plenary Conference Room 2

William Buzenberg (Center for Public Integrity, USA), Mark Schapiro (Center for Investigative Reporting USA)

Moderator: Margo SMIT (Dutch-Flemish Association Of Investigative Journalists)

A response to the economic challenges that investigative journalists face. Formed of former big names of the NYT and Wall Street Journal, and equiped with a considerable launching fund, an account of ProPublica's latest experience. And finally the assessment of those who, over the last couple of years, have found their own business models.

Sunday 25th April

Keynote speaker: Munthader Al Zaïdi (New Tv cenal, Iraq)
From prison to glory: The story of the shoe-thrower

Sunday 25.04 - 09:00Plenary Conference Room 2

Moderator: Olivier KOHLER (Radio Télévision Suisse, Switzerland)

Al Arabya's journalist, Montazer Al Zaïdi, unleashed various reactions after he famously threw his shoe at George Bush. What we may not realise is that Montazer is also a respectable and brave journalist, who has worked in-depth on the suffering of Iraqi civilians.


PLENARY CONFERENCE ROOM 2
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS:
Roberto Saviano
Seymour Hersh
Stephen Engelberg
Baltasar Garzón
Muntazer Al Zaïdi

Closing Ceremony
Useful Desks & Stands
Registration Desk
Coffee Break (Daily during the
4-days event, from 10.15 to 10.45)
Networking Lunch (Daily during the
4-days event, 12.00 to 13.30)
Bookstore - Librairie Le Parnasse
GIJC 2010 FINAL PROGRAM
Useful Desks & Stands
Expo: "Cartoonists for Peace"
Welcome Reception offered by
the City of Geneva (Thursday 22nd
April)
Conference Room 16 - CAR
(Computer-Assisted Reporting)
MAIN TOPICS
The Hidden Web
Excel & Access
Using International Data
Mapping
How teams of journalists can cooperate
Beyond Google 2010
University of Geneva (Room 9)
Please note that this program may be subject to last minute changes or cancellations
Underground Floor
(Sous-sol)

Plenary Conference Room 2 Conference Room 3 Conference Room 4
18.00-19.00 Asian/Middle East organisations
Conference Room 18 Conference Room 15 Conference Room 16 - CAR
European organisations African organisations Latin-American organisations
20.00-22.00
09.00-10.15 OPENING CEREMONY AND
KEYNOTE SPEAKER
Roberto Saviano.
How to expose the mafia and to survive it.
Moderator: Serena Tinari (Radiotelevisione Svizzera
Italiana, Switzerland) T: Italian to French/ English
10.45-12.00 THE LOBBY THAT TRIED TO
KILL COPENHAGEN: INVESTIGATING
CLIMATE CHANGE
Mark Schapiro (Center for Investigative Reporting,
USA), Kate Willson (International Consortium of
Investigative Journalists, USA), Brigitte Alfter
(European Fund for Investigative Journalism,
Belgium), Murali Krishnan (National Affairs
Editor, India)
Moderator: Marina Walker Guevara (International
Consortium of Investigative Journalists, USA)
How certain groups opposing mesures against
climate change attempt to influence discussions and
disrupt the negotiation process. A first-class transnational
investigation.
13.30-14.30 INVESTIGATING UNDERCOVER
Fredrik Laurin, Joachim Dyfvermark, Sven
Bergman (SVT, Sweden), Anas Aremeyaw (New
Crusading Guide, Ghana), Aniruddha Bahal
(Cobrapost.com, India)
Moderator: Emmanuel Mayah (The Sun, Nigeria)
Masters of the hidden camera, our Swedish colleagues
are responsible for several large investigations and
revelations such as the case of adbuctions by the
CIA. Our fellow member from Ghana, winner of
the 'Courage in Journalism' Prize, almost brought
down the Ghanaian government and had the health
department visit the institution the day after its story
"undercover in the madhouse" was aired. And as
for Cobra TV, its raw nerve enabled it to denounce
corrupt ministers and members of Parliament.
15.00-16.00 AT THE HEART OF PIRACY
Fatuma Noor (Nairobi Star, Kenya), Kassim
Mohamed (Star Radio, Kenya), Ken Opala (The
Nation, Kenya)
Moderator: Serge Michel (Freelance, Switzerland)
Established in Nairobi, the Somali journalist Fatuma
Noor went undercover in a brothel run by Somali
warlords. Kassim Mohamed regularly reports on
piracy in Somalia and Ken Opala revealed how the
mafia of warlords launders their profit through the
traffic of sugar-cane. T: EN to FR / FR to EN
16.30-17.30 THE STRANGE BUSINESS OF
WAR CONSULTING
David Barstow (The New York Times, USA)
Moderator: Susanne Reber (NPR, USA)
David received the Pulitzer Prize in 2009 for exposing
the questionable relationship between the arms
industry and "independent" consultants, presented
on major American TV networks. He reveals his
methods and techniques. T: English to French
10.45-12.00 INVESTIGATING CORRUPTION
Zhao Hejuan (China)
Moderator: Frédéric Koller (Le Temps, Switzerland)
Zhao Hejuan is one of the most renowned
investigative journalists in China. Working for the
Shanghai weekly magazine Caijing, Zhao revealed
numerous corruption scandals which led to certain
government officials being sentenced to death. Zhao
now works for new media group, Caixing Media.
13.30-14.30 HOW TO ORGANISE AN
INVESTIGATIVE DESK
Nils Hanson (SVT, Sweden), Dalip Singh (Mail
Today, India), Hermien Y. Kleden (Tempo Weekly
News Magazine, Indonesia)
Moderator: Jean-Philippe Ceppi (Radio Télévision
Suisse, Switzerland)
Nils Hanson and his team direct the Swedish TV
show "Mission: investigate!". The novel organisation
of their unit has enabled the broadcasting of exclusive
investigations with international repercussions.
Dalip Singh manages the investigation desk of the
Mail Today in New Dehli. Awarded investigative
journalist Hermien Y. Kleden is the executive editor
of Tempo Weekly in Jakarta.
15.00-16.00 HOW MENTORS MAKE
TERRORISTS
Margot Williams (Former NY Times and Former
Washington Post, USA), Mohamed Al Ahmady (Al
Ghad, Yemen), Souad Mekhennet (The New York
Times, Germany)
Moderator: Vivienne Walt (Time Magazine, USA)
Margot Williams, in cooperation with Souad
Mekhennet, has investigated the milieux in which
those who have committed or attempted terrorist
acts grew up. Mohamed Al Ahmady is a journalist
working in Yemen, and is considered a specialist on
terrorism. T: Arabic to English / English to Arabic
16.30-17.30 FROM RUSSIA WITH CASH:
HOW TO UNVEIL RUSSIAN OLIGARCHS
Mark Hollingsworth (Freelance, England)
Moderator: Julie Zaugg (L'Hebdo, Switzerland)
One of the most important areas today for any reporter
covering Russia is to know what's going on in the
UK – in light of so many of the wealthiest Russian
billionaire oligarchs having moved there (along with
their money) over the past decade. Hollingsworth is
the author of the recent book "Londongrad: From
Russia With Cash – The Inside Story of the Oligarchs".
A regular contributor for major UK newspapers, he
wrote on the secretive Boris Berezovsky and the
former UK Attorney General embroiled in a suspected
sting that resulted in a top anti-mafia lawyer being
put on trial in secret in Belarus.
10.45-12.00 AT THE HEART OF THE UBS
SCANDAL
Myret Zaki (Bilan, Switzerland), Lukas Haessig
(Freelance, Switzerland)
Moderator: Christian Campiche (Edito, Switzerland)
Two Swiss investigative journalists and authors of
books on this scandal, reveal the techniques which
enabled them to access the heart of one of the largest
bank scandals in Swiss history. T: French to English /
English to French
13.30-14.30 THROW-AWAY POISON: THE
TRAFIGURA CASE
Jeroen Trommelen (Volksrant, Netherlands),
Edouard Gonto (le Jour, Ivory Coast)
Moderator: Roland Rossier (Freelance, Switzerland)
On a hot august night in 2006, twelve tank loads of
toxic waste were secretly dumped on the outskirts of
Abidjan, in Ivory Coast. Thousands of people got ill.
Jeroen and Edouard will explain how they worked
on this major scandal.
T: French to English / English to French
15.00-16.00 HOW TO FINANCE YOUR
INVESTIGATIONS: THE CASE OF THE
MEDIA DEVELOPMENT LOAN FUND
Patrice Schneider (Media Development Loan Fund,
Switzerland), Regula Ritter (ResponsAbility,
Switzerland), Simon Junker (Swiss cooperation),
Lionel Pilloud (Banque Vontobel, Switzerland)
Moderator: Mark HUNTER (INSEAD, France)
This mixed fund has enabled the financing of independant
media which undertake investigations, such
as the Mail & Guardian in South Africa and B92 in
Serbia. T: French to English / English to French
16.30-17.30 STORY-BASED INQUIRY:
USING HYPOTHESES TO FRAME,
SELL, ORGANISE AND COMPOSE
YOUR PROJECT
Mark Hunter (INSEAD, France), Luuk Sengers
(VVOJ, Netherlands)
Moderator: Anna Lemmenmeier (Schweizer Radio
DRS, Switzerland)
Two award-winning investigators and co-authors of
UNESCO/ARIJ's new manual of investigation focus
on processes: how to organise your investigation in
the most efficient way, forecast a budget, meet your
milestones, and defend it in the best way possible to
your editor-in-chief.
10.45-12.00 RADIO INVESTIGATION
Susanne Reber (NPR, USA), Solomon
Adebayo (Radio Nigeria)
Moderator: Sandra Bartlett (CBC Radio News,
Canada)
One may think that the radio is not the best
media for investigative reporting. However,
our two award-winning panelists will show that
this is not the case. They will present what they
investigated and how.
13.30-14.30 GETTING CONFIDENTIAL
DOCUMENTS FROM THE CIA
Alexenia Dimitrova (24 heures, Bulgaria),
Vincent Nouzille (Freelance, France)
Moderator: Gilles Labarthe (Freelance,
Switzerland)
Alexenia researched and found tons of confidential
documents from the American archives,
which enabled her to publish a major work on
their activity in Bulgaria during the cold war.
And Vincent Nouzille has done the same work in
France. T: French to English / English to French
15.00-16.00 FIXED ELECTIONS IN
OLYMPIC-LAND
Rainer Fleckl (Der Kurier, Austria), Eric Vogl
(Der Kurier, Austria)
Moderator: Marlène Magloire (GIJC2010,
Switzerland)
Our Austrian colleagues revealed how consultancies
may have received money from the city of
Salzbourg in order to influence votes in favour of
the city's candidacy for the Olympic Games.
T: German to English
16.30-17.30 CORRUPTION,
TRAFFICKING OF YOUNG PLAYERS,
WELCOME TO AFRICAN FOOTBALL
BEFORE THE WORLD CUP
Eric Mwamba (FAIR, Ivory Coast), Thomas
Olukayode (Timbuktu Media, Nigeria)
Moderator: Declan Hill (Freelance,Canada)
These two courageous reporters investigated
and exposed some nasty stories about football
in Africa: the networks traficking young african
footballers, via the platform of football schools
and how corruption has systematically taken
power in sports, in this case Nigeria.
T: French to English / English to French
10.45-12.00 HOW TO BREED
INVESTIGATIVE REPORTERS
Gavin MacFadyen (Centre for Investigative
Journalism, England)
Moderator: Nadia Bonjour (GIJC 2010,
Switzerland)
This panel will target executives from the media
who are desperately looking for the young talents
who are going to break the scoops and exclusive
researches they need in their staff. And also to
those young sleeping talents whose dream is to
make the headlines and become experienced
investigative reporters.
13.30-14.30 BURN-OUT IN THE
NEWSROOM: ARE YOU NEXT?
Marleen Teugels, Conny Vercaigne (Artevelde
Hogeschool, Belgium)
Moderator: Nadia Bonjour (GIJC2010,
Switzerland)
Marleen and Conny, associated with other
Belgian researchers, investigated the stress that
journalists experience. They present the results of
their research and recommendations for change.
15.00-16.00 RISK MANAGEMENT AND
THE BANKS: THEIR INTELLIGENCE
TECHNICS TOWARDS CLIENTS AND
STAFF
Michael Alkalay (Switzerland)
Moderator: Christian Campiche (Edito,
Switzerland)
Lawyer and economic crime investigator Michael
Alkalay has been police officer and head
of project at the Swiss Federal Police, before
joining UBS as compliance senior officer. In his
panel, he will use examples to show how banks
and other industries are using profiling technics
to collect intelligence about their clients, suppliers
and employees. Alkalay will use the UBS model
to show how banks target clients with a high
risk profile and which inhibitions compliance
departments have to overcome to impose vital
recommendations.
16.30-17.30
INVESTIGATING BERLUSCONI
Claudia Fusani (L'Unità, Italy)
Moderator: Serena Tinari (Radiotelevisione
Svizzera Italiana, Switzerland)
"Either you leave now, or I'll do it". That's how
the Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi
lately greeted her question at a press conference
in Rome. Claudia Fusani will tell us how you
do investigate the man which is at the same
time a Tycoon, the richest person and the Prime
Minister of a country. Claudia works for L'Unità,
a daily newspaper that like several other Italian
media is permanently under pressure.
10.45-12.00 CAR: GENERAL
INTRODUCTION AND PRESENTATION
David Donald (The Center for Public Integrity,
USA)
What's computer-assisted reporting, why should
it interest you, and how can digging in governmental
and other databases take your investigative
skills to a new level? The session is a
general introduction to CAR – computer-assisted
reporting – and to the hands on classes at the
conference. See recent examples and learn about
the tools used in CAR so you can see which
classes you should go to and what CAR may do
for your reporting when you're back home.
13.30-14.30 CAR: THE HIDDEN WEB
(1): HOW TO ANALYSE A WEBSITE
Guido Rudolphi (NetMon GmbH, Switzerland)
How to obtain additional data about a homepage.
There is a lot of data around from third
parties, but one has to know how to retrieve
it. Furthermore, a lot of information is often
contained in the homepage and on the server.
Participants of the session will see how one
can obtain and analyze this information, how it
can lead to additional and valuable information
which drives a research forward and gives new
aspects.
15.00-16.00 CAR: EXCEL I BEGINNER
LEVEL
Helena Bengtsson (Sveriges Television, Sweden)
Creating your first spreadsheet, calculate and
sort your data.
16.30-17.30 CAR: ACCESS I
BEGINNER LEVEL
Helena Bengtsson (Sveriges Television, Sweden)
Introduction to MS Access, for beginners. Learn
how to sort and select you material.
GIJC 2010 FINAL PROGRAM - THURSDAY 22nd APRIL, 2010
INFO
Thursday
22nd April
From
07:30 and
throughout
the day:
Registration
at CICG
COFFEE
BREAK
10.15-10.45
(30 MIN)
LUNCH
12.00-13.30
(90 MIN)
REGIONAL
ORG.
MEETINGS
18.00-19.00
WELCOME
DINNER
CICG
20.00-22.00
SOCIAL EVENT: WELCOME RECEPTION OFFERED BY THE CITY OF GENEVA, WITH A DINNER OF SWISS DISHES AT THE CICG
Plenary Conference Room 2 Conference Room 3 Conference Room 4
09.00-10.15 KEYNOTE SPEAKER:
Seymour Hersh
Investigative Journalism, needed more than ever.
Moderator: Brant Houston (Investigative News
Network, USA)
One of the most awarded investigative journalist,
Seymour Hersh has accepted the invitation made by
the GIJC 2010 to be a keynote speaker in Geneva.
Known as early as 1969 to be the journalist who
broke the My Lai scandal in Vietnam, Seymour
Hersh has more recently exposed the Abu Graib
scandal. Hersh has published eight books, including,
most recently, "Chain of Command" which was
based on his reporting on Abu Ghraib for The New
Yorker. It is the first time that Seymour Hersh will
speak at a GIJC. T: French to English / English to French
10.45-12.00 WHEN THE GAME IS RIGGED
Declan Hill (Freelance, Canada), Vittorio Malagutti
(L'Espresso, Italy), Johnson Fernandez (The Malay
Mail, Malaysia)
Moderator: Luigino Canal (Freelance, Switzerland)
Three months before the World Cup in South Africa,
investigations bring to light the latest story to shake
the football world: fixed games. These three reporters
have exposed match-fixers and possible rigged
matches at the highest football tournaments in the
world, including the World Cup itself.
13.30-14.30 Business models for
investigati ve journalism: the
case of the Canard Enchaîné
Claude Angeli (Le Canard Enchaîné, France)
Moderator: Claude Torracinta (Switzerland)
For over a century, this French satirical weekly, with
a loyal following of nearly a million readers, has
been exposing secrets of the Republic. Its editorin-
chief, Claude Angeli, tells how this reference in
investigative journalism has also become a business
model, with no advertising. T: FR to EN / EN to FR
15.00-16.00 "Profiling": how to
investigate important public
figures
William Karel (France)
Moderator: Jean Leclerc (Swiss Radio, Switzerland)
Internationally-known documentary filmmaker
William Karel is also the author of two investigative
documentaries on the Bush family and Margaret
Thatcher. He explains how to create a ground-breaking
portrait of public figures.
T: FR to EN / EN to FR
16.30-17.30 Secret Services in
Putin's Russia
Andrei Soldatov, Irina Borogan (Agentura.ru,
Russia), Roman Shleinov (Novaya Gazeta, Russia),
Peter Klebnikov (Environmental Defense Fund, USA)
Moderator: Thérèse Obrecht Hodler (Reporters
without Boarders, Switzerland)
Andrei Soldatov is an expert on Russian information
services and a chronicler for Ezhednevny Journal.
He is also the director of the web site Agentura.
ru – an information hub on intelligence agencies and
Russian secret services. His colleague Irina Borogan,
also specialises in this field, as well as terrorism
and the tightening of controls over society under the
pretext of counter-extremism. Roman Shleinov is one
of the most renown investigators of Russia and Peter
Klebnikov directs the campaign launched following
the murder of his brother, Paul, the former editor of
Forbes-Russia.
10.45-12.00 How to make friends
while defending consumers
Luc Mariot, Daniel Stons (Radio Télévision Suisse,
Switzerland) and Rachid Khechana (Al Maouqif,
Tunisia)
Moderator: Christian Campiche (Edito, Switzerland)
The defence of consumers is a major historical
current in our profession, and in the last decade,
it's been highly succcessful for the Swiss Television
show "A Bon Entendeur". Our colleagues Luc
Mariot and Daniel Stons reveal their particular
research techniques. The Tunisian journalist, Rachid
Khechana, investigated an export of a vegetable oil
by his country and the analyses showed that the oil
was adulterated. Following the scandal, the oil was
removed of the market. T: French to English
13.30-14.30 Football, money and
crime: Behind the goalposts
Renaud Lecadre (Libération), Stevan Dojcinovic
(Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project,
Serbia)
Moderator: Alain Jourdan (Tribune de Genève,
Switzerland)
Recognised experts on the lords and financial empire
of football, these colleagues explain how to penetrate
this close-knit world with its astronomical sums of
money and links to organised crime.
T: French to English / English to French
15.00-16.00 The growing industry
of kidnapping
Anne-Frédérique Widmann (Radio Télévision
Suisse, Switzerland), Hollman Morris (TV
Contravia, Colombie)
Moderator: Paola Villa (GIJC2010, Switzerland)
From the Bétancourt Case to the story of Bulgarian
nurses, how can we investigate the highly secretive
world of kidnapping, ransoms and diplomatic negotiations?
Two crossed experiences from Colombian
territory to the hushed corridors of diplomacy.
16.30-17.30 The journalist and the
Prosecutor : can they cooperate ?
Dick Marty (Council of Europe special rapporteur,
Switzerland), Altin Raxhimi (Tirana Reporting
Collective, Albania), Miroluba Benatova (BTV
reporters, Bulgaria)
Moderator: François Sergent (Libération, France)
Our professions are closely related, and we are very
often working on the same themes. But it is difficult
to have an interaction and an exchange. What to do?
Where are the limits? Former prosecutor Dick Marty
and our colleagues will explore how far a cooperation
on their respective investigations is possible.
T: French to English / English to French
10.45-12.00 Off with their heads:
the horrors of narco-decapita -
tions . Narration and alternati ve
investigation
Sergio González Rodríguez (Reforma, Mexico)
Moderator: Marie Maurisse (Freelance, L'Hebdo,
Le Figaro, Switzerland)
After the female homicides in Ciudad Juárez, Mexican
journalist Sergio González Rodríguez turned his
attention to a macabre phenomenon: decapitations
in Mexican drug cartels. From this investigation, he
published a terrifying book.
13.30-14.30 Getting into the
discretE world of finance
Dirk Schütz (Bilanz,Switzerland)
Moderator: Raymond Frenken (European Journalism
Centre, Netherlands)
In the heart of a world financial crisis, the world of
traders is one of the most secretive. How do you get
them to talk? Who are the experts that can decrypt
their coded language? Dirk Schütz a renowned
financial journalist, share his methods.
15.00-16.00 How to reveal
Trafigura's dirty industry , and
tell the story on television
Synnove Bakke, Kjersti Knudsson (NRK Television,
Norway)
Moderator: Nadia Bonjour (GIJC2010, Switzerland)
While the rest of the world was reporting from the
Probo Koala waste-scandal in Abidjan, Trafigura
rerouted identical waste and sulpherous gasoline
to a small tank-facility in Norway. For six months
Norway was the main site in Trafiguras dubious
production of bad gasoline. Then, in May 2007, a
tank exploded. People in the area started falling ill,
but nobody could tell what was in the tank prior
to the explosion. Norwegian journalists, Synnøve
Bakke and Kjersti Knudsson, started to investigate.
In this session they tell how they unveiled the
Trafigura-scandal in Norway, and how they disclosed
Trafiguras international production of bad gasoline
that was illegal to sell in Europe. We will also demonstrate,
with video-clips, how we chose to tell this
complicated story on television.
16.30 - 17.30 Slavery in Europe:
how to expose the trafficking
networks
Adrian Mogos (Center for Investigative Journalism,
Romania). Emmanuel Mayah (The Sun, Nigeria)
Moderator: Anna Lemmenmeier (Schweizer Radio
DRS, Switzerland)
Adrian and his colleagues from the Center for
Investigative Journalism in Bucharest led a major investigation
which revealed how agricultural workers
are exploited by criminal gangs on behalf of a Dutch
multinational. Across the Libyan desert, our Nigerian
colleague Emmanuel Mayah investigated for 7
months the networks of migrants and frontier runners
heading towards Europe.
Conference Room 18 Conference Room 15 Conference Room 16 - CAR
10.45-12.00 Business models for
investigati ve journalism:
Emerging countries
Evelyn Groenink (FAIR, South Africa), Charles
Rukuni (FAIR, Zimbabwe), Shantanu Guha
Ray (Tehelka news magazine, India)
Moderator: Margo Smit (Dutch-Flemish
Association Of Investigative Journalists)
On a continent notorious for being deprived of
resources, the "Forum for African Investigative
Reporters" has developed and financed numerous
transnational investigations. Can this original
model work elsewhere? In India, the news
magazine Tehelka dedicated to public interest
journalism is such a business model and will
be represented by his business editor Shantanu
Guha Ray.
13.30-14.30 INVESTIGATING POWER
AND CORRUPTION
Vlad Lavrov (Ukraine, Korrespondent), Dumitru
Lazur (Moldavia, Obiectiv), Djordje Padejski
(Center for Investigative Reporting, Serbia)
Moderator: Luis Vázquez (Freelance, Mexico/
Switzerland)
With other colleagues, Vlad Lavrov and Dumitru
Lazur exposed how the family of the former
president of Moldavia amassed enormous wealth
by using the power of the government and the
presidency. As a consequence of the publication,
Vladimir Voronin was voted out of office.
In Serbia, Djordje Padejski exposed complicities
between local criminals and politicians.
15.00-16.00 Humans for sale
Habib Ur-Rehman, Kazi Hassan (GEO
Television, Pakistan), Franck Nyakairu (Reuters,
Uganda)
Moderator: Chrystel Dayer (GIJC2010,
Switzerland)
Two Pakistani journalists investigated the trafficking
of humans in Pakistan, they entered Iran
illegally and recorded the film with the help of a
hidden camera. Award-winning Ugandan reporter
Frank Nyakairu has followed the trail of human
trafficking through Somalia and Sudan.
16.30-17.30 How confidential
newsletters underwrite
investigation
Maurice Botbol (Indigo Publications, France)
Moderator: Alain Jourdan (Tribune de Genève,
Switzerland)
State and Corporate Intelligence in Europe, the
US, the Middle-East and Asia; Power Brokers
and Business Circles on the African Continent;
Mining and Energy Resources in Africa; Political
and Business Issues in France: the eight newsletters
of this group function according to an original
business model. Maurice Botbol, director and
founder of this group, unveils his techniques.
T: French to English / English to French
10.45-12.00 When the State is a
Family Affair
Ahmed Benchemsi (Tel Quel, Morocco),
Theophilus Abbah (Sunday Trust, Nigeria)
Moderator: Marie Akuffo (The Crusading
Guide, Ghana)
How do we access the secret privileges of those
who enjoy family ties to power? Benchemsi and
his magazine have published some very thorough
investigations on the Moroccan royal family.
Abbah has received death threats for his investigation
revealing how family dynasties monopolise
Nigerian power.
T: French to English / English to French
13.30-14.30 CAR: Security for
investigati ve Journalists
(and everyone else)
Sebastian Mondial (DPA, Germany)
Security for daily searches and unique investigative
reporting. Securing the Computer for
the outside (internet intrusion, snooping) and
for searches by no-friendly-third parties (aka
snoops,police,theft). What can I store on mobile
devices and what not (like iphone). Based mostly
on free and open source software. Also: A sidestep
to "stealth" investigative reporting (but not
dominantly).
15.00-16.00 CAR : Computer
Assisted Reporting at no Cost:
Free and Open Source Tools
Sebastian Mondial (DPA, Germany)
No-Cost-CAR solutions for scraping, calculating
and reporting. This would feature the use
of free and open-source CAR-software on a low
to medium knowledge level. Goal would be to
offer one solution for each area with a checklist
of what to do and to whom should we refer
if external expertise is needed (in corporate
networks and if you need some data put onto
servers/hosting).
16.30-17.30 When the story is in
the open
Guido Rudolphi (NetMon GmbH, Switzerland)
Moderator: Luigino Canal (Freelance,
Switzerland)
Just how rich is Marc Rich? And Tina Turner?
What are Schumacher's house and assets worth?
In most Swiss cantons, you can obtain interesting
tax information through a simple phone call.
10.45-12.00 CAR: Using
international data for
investigati ve reporting
David Donald (The Center for Public Integrity,
USA), Nils Mulvad (Kaas & Mulvad, Denmark)
More and more data from around the world are
posted on the Internet. And many of these data
cross borders, meaning investigative reporters
can find local and regional records and stories
in data from countries that are not their own.
Learn where to look for these databases, how to
download them and what to look for once you
have them. The session will include a tutorial on
the Ujima project, a fledgling international journalism
website that has made such data and easyto-
use analytical tools available for reporters.
13.30-14.30 CAR: The Hidden Web
(2): How to analyse a hard-disk
Guido Rudolphi (NetMon GmbH, Switzerland)
Nowadays documents are stored mostly on computer
hard drives. However, once deleted, many
people think they are gone forever. I will show
in the presentation how participants can retrieve
deleted data from hard drives which may lead to
a story. Participants will receive a forensic CD
which will enable them in the future to dig for
deleted files on hard-drives by themselves.
15.00-16.00 CAR: Excel II Medium
Level
Helena Bengtsson (Sveriges Television, Sweden)
Downloading data into Excel, using simple formulas
to format and analyze your material. Basic
knowledge of Excel needed.
16.30-17.30 CAR: Access II Medium
Level
Helena Bengtsson (Sveriges Television, Sweden)
Calculations and sums - learn more about
analyzing databases and tables in Access. Basic
knowledge of Access needed.
GIJC 2010 FINAL PROGRAM - FRIDAY 23th APRIL, 2010
INFO
COFFEE
BREAK
10.15-10.45
(30 MIN)
LUNCH
12.00-13.30
(90 MIN)
DINNER
AT BFM
(See page 2)
20.00-22.00
CONCERT
CAFÉ
HUISSOUD
(See page 7)
22.30-01.00
20.00-22.00 OFFERED BY THE CANTON OF GENEVA AT SOCIAL EVENTS: NETWORKING DINNER BFM (see page 2 for the venue )
22.30-01.00 concert with "the muckrakers " at caf é wine bar huissoud (rue du stand 51, 200 meters from bfm )
Plenary Conference Room 2 Conference Room 3 Conference Room 4
09.00-10.15 Keynote speaker
Stephen Engelberg (Propublica, USA)
Financing the future of investigation: Old hands,
new tricks in the USA.
David Kaplan (Center for Public Integrity, USA),
Mark Schapiro (Center for Investigative Reporting
USA)
Moderator: Margo Smit (Dutch-Flemish Association
Of Investigative Journalists)
A response to the economic challenges that investigative
journalists face. Formed of former big names
of the NYT and Wall Street Journal, and equiped
with a considerable launching fund, an account of
ProPublica's latest experience. And finally the assessment
of those who, over the last couple of years,
have found their own business models.
T: French to English / English to French
10.45-12.00 Tobacco, terrorism and
organised crime
Mabel Rehnfeldt (ABC Color, Paraguay),
Emmanuel Mayah (the Sun, Nigeria), David
Kaplan (International Consortium of Investigative
Journalists, USA)
Moderator: Susanne Reber (NPR, USA)
As a result of an impressive transnational investigation,
this group of journalists revealed in their latest
research how the illicit trade industry financed the
Congolese civil war as well as the Talibans in Afghanistan.
They present to us their methodology.
T: French to English & Spanish (viceversa)
13.30-14.30 War in the shadows:
Covering clandestine war zones
when you're not embedded
Stephen Grey (Freelance, UK), Paul Moreira
(Premières Lignes, France)
Moderator: David Barstow (The New York Times, USA)
Acclaimed investigative reporter, and author of a
groundbreaking book on the CIA's 'extraordinary
rendition' programme, Stephen Grey went to Afghanistan
to investigate the CIA's secret operations and
the Special Forces. He explains how to work when
you are not 'embedded'. So did Paul Moreira, director
and producer at Premières Lignes production, in Iraq.
T: French to English / English to French
15.00-16.00 How Investigation adds
value in a time of crisis
Gilles Marchand (Radio Télévision Suisse,
Switzerland), Norman Pearlstine (Bloomberg, USA)
Moderator: Raymond Frenken (European Journalism
Centre, Netherlands)
How can we integrate investigation into the strategy
of media groups? In times of crisis, does it provide
added value or is it just an added cost? A response
from two managers in charge of private and public
media: Gilles Marchand heads the Radio Télévision
Suisse (French), based in Geneva. Norman Pearlstine
is chief content officer of Bloomberg News and
president of Business Week.
T: French to English / English to French
16.30-17.30 Keynote speaker
Judge Baltasar Garzón
The judge and the journalist: how can they work
together?
Moderator: Marina Walker Guevara (International
Consortium of Investigative Journalists, USA)
Judge Garzon made it possible, amongst other, to
hold ex-dictator Pinochet's trial, in Chile. He is
involved as well in the fight against ETA, the narco
trafickers, and the investigation about Silvio Berlusconi.
He is very much at the front of investigating Al
Qaeda's networks and warned the Spanish governement
just before the Madrid 11th March 2004 attack.
T: Spanish to English / English to Spanish
09.00-10.15 When the police don't
answer
Morten Frich (Berlingske Tidende, Denmark)
Moderator: Nils Mulvad (Kaas & Mulvad, Denmark)
A fascinating investigation led by our Danish colleagues
which revealed that all too often, the police is
not there when you need them. This work provoked
a shock-wave across Denmark and resulted in our
fellow members being awared prestigious prizes.
And what if this happened where you live?
10.45-12.00 Tracking a
multinational across borders
Klaus Ott (Süddeutsche Zeitung, Germany), Tasos
Telloglou (Kathimerini, Greece)
Moderator: Anna Lemmenmeier (Schweizer Radio
DRS, Switzerland)
These two speakers exchanged information, sources
and documents on a story about Siemens that shook
Europe. They show how to directly cooperate in
order to complete a "multinational" investigation.
13.30-14.30 Financing the future of
investigation : How TV will pay
for your work
Roch Bozino (Java Films-France), Stéphane
Haumant (Canal +, France)
Moderator: Jean-Philippe Ceppi (Radio Télévision
Suisse, Switzerland)
Distributer Roch Bozino is very familiar with the
investigative documentary market. It's a market
that is working well for him, and the point is that
not everyone is suffering from the economic crisis.
So how do you decide on your topic? Who do you
contact? What project will a producer buy? Producer
and chief editor of the famous investigative program
"Special Investigation" at the private Canal + television,
Stéphane Haumant has the key. T: FR to EN
15.00-16.00 The murder of
colleagues. The danger of
investigating in Russia
Roman Shleinov (Novaya Gazeta, Russia), Peter
Klebnikov (Environmental Defense Fund, USA),
Richard Behar (Project Klebnikov)
Moderator: Thérèse Obrecht Hodler (Reporters
without Boarders, Switzerland)
After Paul Klebnikov was murdered, then Anna
Politkovskaïa, an update on the assassination of our
two colleagues. With this question: how dangerous is
it to be an investigative journalist in today's Russia?
16.30-17.30 Investigation at and
with NGOs
Tony Sadownichik (Greenpeace), Peter Bouckaert
(Human Rights Watch)
Moderator: Mark Hunter (INSEAD, France)
What if certain NGOs and investigative journalists
shared their resources? Often involved on similar investigations,
what are the possibilities and limitations
of a collaboration? A response from those in charge of
research at two of the largest NGOs in the world.
09.00-10.15 Investigating
paedophile networks
Sanjuana Martinez (Freelance, Mexico), Imad Al
Rawashdeh (FM Radio, Jordan), Majdoleen Hasan
(ARIJ Network, Jordan)
Moderator: Luis Vázquez (Freelance, Mexico/
Switzerland)
The Mexican journalist Sanjuana Martínez received
death threats after exposing certain catholic priests
that committed acts of paedophilia. The experience of
the two Jordanian journalists, Imad Rawashdeh and
Madjoleen Hasan, showed through an investigation on
sexual and physical violence subjected to the orphans
in state-run and private orphanages in Jordan.
10.45-12.00 How China buys the
world. Case Studies: From
Congo to Costa Rica; Namibia to
Zambia
Richard Behar (USA), John Grobler
(The Namibian, Namibia), Giannina Segnini (La
Nación, Costa Rica)
Moderator: Frédéric Koller (Le Temps, Switzerland)
Massive investments in Namibian mines, investments
in Costa Rica's Cooperative; China is
everywhere. Our colleagues Grobler and Segnini
and awarded journalist Richard Behar, who wrote a
compelling investigative piece for "Fast Company",
will show how they accessed the full picture.
13.30-14.30 Revealing the methods
of secret services
Arturo Torres (El Comercio, Ecuador)
Moderator: Paola Villa (GIJC2010, Switzerland)
Following an interview with Raul Reyes (FARC's
No 2), Torres revealed how the Colombian secret
services managed to infiltrate the FARC during eight
years.
15.00-16.00 How to investigate
gangs
Steeve Baumann (CapaTV, France), Eric Lemus
(Freelance Journalist BBC Mundo/ LaPagina.com.sv,
El Salvador), Marcelo MOREIRA (RJTV/ Groupe
Globo TV, Brazil)
Moderator: Marie Maurisse (Freelance, L'Hebdo,
Le Figaro, Switzerland)
The French-Spanish journalist, Christian Poveda,
was murdered by a Salvadorian gang whilst he was
investigating in the country. Becoming a major
problem in societies, our guests discuss how to get
close to such a milieu without it costing your life?
16.30-17.30 When police knock at
the door. The case of France
Christophe Labbé (Le Point, France), Vittorio de
Filippis (Libération, France)
Moderator: Alain Jourdan (La Tribune de Genève,
Switzerland)
How to protect yourself from search-warrants? How
to work in these conditions, and protect your sources
and documents? A response from two journalists
who have experienced first-hand Sarkozy's repression
methods. T: French to English
Conference Room 18 Conference Room 15 Conference Room 16 - CAR
09.00-10.15 "Crowdsourcing":
when the people investigate
Jana Wuyts (Het Nieuwsblad, Belgium)
Moderator: Ides Debruyne (The Pascal Decroos
Fund for Investigative Journalism)
"Crowdsourcing" is a research method that
consists of outsourcing tasks to large networks of
Internet users. The presentation of this spectacular
project is led by our Belgian colleagues from Het
Nieuwsblad.
10.45-12.00 How I caught the
spammers
Simon Cox (BBC, UK)
Moderator: David Barstow (The New York
Times, USA)
"Want a penis enlargement?" Annoyed with
one of the largest spamming operations on the
web, Simon Cox investigated, on behalf of radio
programme BBC 4, a network of spammers that
went from London to New Zealand. His investigation
led to the arrest of the authors. T: EN to FR
13.30-14.30 Investigating arms
dealers - The Patria case
Blaz Zgaga (Freelance, Slovenia), Magnus
Berglund (Finnish Television, Finland)
Moderator: Nils Mulvad (Kaas & Mulvad,
Denmark)
Thanks to transborder collaboration, these two
journalists exposed a huge corruption story
implicating Finnish defence company Patria
and the Slovenian Prime Minister Janez Jansa.
Millions of bribes have been given in 278 million
euros worth arms deal. Dozens of suspects are
currently under criminal investigation by Finnish,
Austrian and Slovenian police.
15.00-16.00 When game shows
mean big money
Gilles Delbos (France 2, France)
Moderator: Philippe Lugassy (Radio Télévision
Suisse, Switzerland)
Gilles Delbos, on behalf of French TV channel
M6, led a sensitive investigation of the national
lottery monopoly, la Française des Jeux. He recounts
the multiple pressures that he faced. What
to do in such a situation? How to resist? How can
you access sensitive information on the world's
lotteries and money games? T: French to English
16.30-17.30 Extracting scandals
from the Mining Industry
Mary Akuffo (the Crusading Guide, Ghana),
Annie Mpalume (Freelance photographer, Zimbabwe),
John Grobler (The Namibian, Namibia)
Moderator: Vivienne Walt (Time Magazine, USA)
Mary received numerous awards for exposing the
working conditions in Western African mines.
Annie was arrested for photo-documenting diamond
mines. John has been reporting for many
years on the mining industry in his country, a big
producer of uranium and diamonds.
09.00-10.15 How to fight animal
cruelty with a hidden camera
Per Hermanrud (TV4 Sweden, Sweden)
Moderator: Serge Michel (Freelance, Switzerland)
Per and his team exposed the conditions under
which the bed linen industry subcontracted its
supply of feathers in Eastern Europe. Disguising
themselves as buyers, they went and filmed
the brutal suffering of thousands of birds, and
confronted the major players.
10.45-12.00 Financing the
future: investigation in the
digital age
Brant Houston (Investigative News Network,
USA)
Brant heads the newly created 'Investigative
News Network' in the United States, a consortium
of non-profit organisations. In this panel, he
will present new perspectives for investigative
journalism in the digital era.
13.30-14.30 Libel Tourism
Andrew Sullivan (Organized Crime and Corruption
Reporting Project, Bosnia and Herzegovina),
David Leigh (The Guardian, UK)
Moderator: Andrew Sullivan (Organized Crime
and Corruption Reporting Project, Bosnia and
Herzegovina)
Organized crime figures, oligarchs, corrupt
politicians and even celebrities have found a new
weapon against intrepid investigative reporting:
libel tourism. Most reporters have no idea they
can be sued in places like London, Singapore and
Australia and the judgments against them can
be enforced in their own country. Three experts
will explain how libel tourism really works. They
will talk about their own experiences of being
sued by dodgy characters and they will tell you
what you can do to protect yourself in the global
media marketplace.
15.00-16.00 European business
models for investigati ve
journalism
Brigitte Alfter (European Fund for Investigative
Journalism, Belgium), Stefan Candea (Center
for Investigative Journalism, Romania)
Moderator: Margo Smit (Dutch-Flemish Association
Of Investigative Journalists)
Unlike the United States, Europeans do not
often have grants or foundations to help fund
their investigations. While European media are
experiencing the repercussions of the crisis,
several investigative journalism funds have been
launched as well as new media initiatives. An
evaluation of the situation.
16.30-17.30 The Truth about Tax
Havens
David Leigh (The Guardian, UK), Santiago
Fascetto (La Prensa, Panama)
Moderator: Raymond Frenken (European
Journalism Centre, Netherlands)
Financial crisis and fiscal war, the investigation
into tax havens demands the competencies
and techniques of specialists. David Leigh has
published in the Guardian a series of important
articles and investigation. Santiago Fascetto is
directing the investigation section of La Prensa.
09.00-10.15 Investigation in
practice: Setting up a
research cell
Stefan Candea (Romanian Centre for Investigative
Journalism, Romania) and Scoop
The pooling of investigative journalists' data
banks makes it possible to accelerate transnational
investigations. A demonstration from Stefan
Candea, who runs the Romanian Center for
Investigative Journalism in Bucharest.
10.45-12.00 CAR: Mapping
Mark Horvit (Investigative Reporters and
Editors, USA)
Examples of mapping projects that have been
done by various media outlets to show the
variety of uses.
13.30-14.30 CAR: Follow the
Money: how teams of
journalists can cooperate
Paul Radu (Stanford University, Romania),
Justin Arenstein (FAIR, South Africa)
A look at new collaborative and research techniques
for following the money across borders.
How to use on-line databases, registrars of companies
and software tools for mapping out the
complex business structures of organized crime.
A deconstruction of the cross-border investigative
process from forming the international team
to the outcome of the investigation.
15.00-16.00 CAR: Excel III Advanced
Level
Helena Bengtsson (Sveriges Television, Sweden)
Advanced formulas, conditions and parsing text.
Basic knowledge of Excel needed.
16.30-17.30 CAR: Access III
Advanced Level
Helena Bengtsson (Sveriges Television, Sweden)
Joining databases - how to find connections
between tables. Basic knowledge of Access
needed.
GIJC 2010 FINAL PROGRAM - SATURDAY 24th APRIL, 2010
COFFEE
BREAK
10.15-10.45
(30 MIN)
LUNCH
12.00-13.30
(90 MIN)
GALA
DINNER
(Bookings
only)
At RTS
(See page 2)
19.30-22.00
GLOBAL
SHINING
LIGHT
AWARD
(During the
Gala Dinner
at RTS)
BAR AT
RTS
After the
Gala Dinner
19.30-22.00 SOCIAL EVENT: GALA DINNER (BOOKINGS ONLY) AT THE STUDIO 4, SWISS TELEVISION BUILDING (RTS - SEE PAGE 2)
09.00-10.15 CAR:
Data -driven
journalism: Can
digging into data
help to finance
investigati ve
journalism?
Mirko Lorenz (European Journalism
Centre - ECJ)
The panel provides some new
perspectives on data mining and
visualization, from the perspective
of investigative journalism.
Data-sets are increasingly becoming
accessible and can be analyzed with
tools that where not available at a
all just three years ago. This panel
will try to provide an overview
about recent developments and reallife
examples how data can be used
for ongoing investigation, provide
examples and discuss the skills
needed to use data.
10.45-12.00 CAR: Beyond
Google 2010
Margot Williams (Former New
York Times and Former Washington
Post, USA)
Finding public records information
online neither government transparency
initiatives nor Google's
reach have yet provided tools for
comprehensive search and retrieval
of the information maintained
in public records databases like
court records, corporation filings
and property records. Investigative
researcher Margot Williams will
help with strategies for finding
and searching databases in online
courthouses, agencies and archives.
Tips for avoiding gaps and pitfalls
and for using commercial databases
efficiently will be handed out as
well as a hands-on tour of the best
sites and services.
09.00-10.15 "Mama, I've
been spInNED!" And
how to avoid it
Luc Hermann (Premières Lignes,
France)
Moderator: Marlène Magloire
(GIJC2010, Switzerland)
Luc Hermann, ex-producer of Canal
Plus and producer for Premières
Lignes, is a specialist in "spin
doctors". He explains how to avoid
falling into their traps.
10.15-10.45 Coffee Break
10.45-12.00 Environmental
investigation : The
case of medical waste
Mona Iraqi (ARIJ, Egypt), Rana
Sabbagh (ARIJ, Jordan)
Moderator: Amel Béji (GIJC2010,
Switzerland)
In Egypt, recycling medical waste
from hospitals is a lucrative clandestine
business. Our colleagues
tell how they exposed the business
and forced the Ministry of Health
to stop it.
09.00-10.15 Note-taking ,
speed reading and
record-keeping
Luuk Sengers (VVOJ, Netherlands)
It may sound mundane, but you may
not be doing it in the most effective
way, and time is the only resource
you don't ever recover. Learn how
to streamline some of the most
demanding and common tasks in
our jobs.
10.15-10.45 Coffee Break
10.45-12.00 Historical
investigation : how to
find a living memory
Duc Tue Dang (Vietnam)
Moderator: Carole Vann (InfoSud,
Switzerland)
Far from the world headlines, our
colleagues from Vietnam have
documented the history of the war
in their country by finding local and
Vietnamese veterans and crossing
their views.
T: French to English
Plenary Conference Room 2 Conference Room 3 Conference Room 4
09.00-10.15 Keynote
speaker
Muntazer Al Zaïdi (New Tv cenal,
Iraq)
From prison to glory: The story
of the shoe-thrower.
Moderator: Olivier Kohler (Radio
Télévision Suisse, Switzerland)
Al Arabya's journalist, Muntazer Al
Zaïdi, unleashed various reactions
after he famously threw his shoe
at George Bush. What we may not
realise is that Muntazer is also a
respectable and brave journalist,
who has worked in-depth on the
suffering of Iraqi civilians.
T: Arabic to English / English to Arabic
10.15-10.45 Coffee Break
10.45-12.00 Reporting on
Tasers: Using science
and data to cut
through the hype
Sandra Bartlett (CBC Radio
News, Canada), Frédéric Zalac
(Enquête Radio, Canada)
Moderator: François Sergent
(Libération, France)
The weapon is sold around the
world as an alternative to the gun.
But how is it being used in your
country? Our colleagues from
Canada have tracked stun gun use,
checked out the science and even
tested Taser electrical output. Find
out how you can do the same.
12.00-13.30 Lunch-box
Closing ceremony
09.00-10.15 When the
bank is in the Church
Leo Sisti (L'Espresso, Italy),
Giannina Segnini (La Nación,
Costa Rica)
Moderator: François Sergent
(Libération, France)
How do the faithful become the
flock that's fleeced? Leo Sisti
revealed the financial workings
of the Vatican. Giannina Segnini
discovered how the Roman Catholic
Church in Costa Rica had created,
practically clandestinely, a bank.
10.15-10.45 Coffee Break
10.45-12.00 How to
investigate without
putting your sources
in danger
Mohamed Ahmady (Al Ghad,
Yemen), Kipchumba Some (The
Standard, Kenya), Dilrukshi
Handunnetti (Sri Lanka)
Moderator: Nathaniel Daudricht
(Alkarama, EMERglobal,
Switzerland)
Mohamed Al Ahmady works on Al
Qaida, in dangerous and extreme
conditions, putting his live at risk.
How do you investigate without losing
your life, or the lives of others?
T: Arabic to English / English to Arabic
09.00-10.15 Investigating
Water Pollution
Hisham Allam and Dareen
Farghaly (Almasry Alyoum, Egypte)
Moderator: Vivienne Walt (Time
Magazine, USA)
How the mythic Nile river was
heavily polluted by industrial waste,
and how our Egyptian colleagues
exposed it.
10.15-10.45 Coffee Break
10.45-12.00 Rich &
Famous: investigating
the "People" in your
country
Tuomo Pietiläinen (Helsingin
Sanomat, Finland), Jon Beveridge
(The Sunday Times)
Tuomo Pietiläinen will explain in
detail how he collected sensitive
data on more than 5000 richest
people in Finland. Such list is also
a hit, each year, for The Sunday
Times, as our colleague Jon Beveridge
will explain.
GIJC 2010 FINAL PROGRAM - SUNDAY 25th APRIL, 2010
Conference Room 18 Conference Room 15 Conference Room 16 - CAR
VISIT GENEVA BEFORE YOU GO!
Photos: Daniel Hostettler

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