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RFI’s Dupont and Verlon Prize awarded to Benin media workers

Three years after the murder of RFI journalist Ghislaine Dupont, and RFI technician Claude Verlon in Kidal in the north of Mali, RFI awarded the third annual scholarship created to commemorate them to journalist Cécile Goudou and technician Didier Guedou, in Cotonou in Benin.

Cécile Mégie, director of RFI, with Cécile Goudou (l) et Didier Guedou, à Cotonou, 2 november 2016.
Cécile Mégie, director of RFI, with Cécile Goudou (l) et Didier Guedou, à Cotonou, 2 november 2016. O&S
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The two were awarded the scholarship after a two week apprentice given by France Media Monde in Cotonou, in partnership with the Office for Radio and Television Broadcasting (ORTB) in Benin.

The two winners were selected from a group of ten who were shortlisted from 220 candidates.

Cécile Goudou is 31 years old and holds a diploma in journalism from the International School for Technical Education in Benin and is currently an editor with the ORTB.

Didier Guedou is 22 years old and holds a diploma in audiovisual communications from the Institute for Audiovisual Studies, also in Benin. He is currently working for the group compromised of Eden TV and Diaspora FM.

Both will be brought to Paris next year for intensive training with RFI, in association with the School of Journalism at Sciences Po and the Centre for Training in Audiovisual Communications.

Meanwhile, an NGO campaigning to find the whole truth about the murders of RFI's Ghislaine Dupont and Claude Verlon suspects the French government of knowing more than it admits about their deaths in Mali three years ago.

And a line in a book of interviews with President François Hollande has confirmed their suspicions.

"Who are the killers, who gave the orders, what are the circumstances and why?" Pierre-Yves Schneider, spoke person for the Friends of Ghislaine Dupont and Claude Verlon asked at a press conference last week.

The pair were shot dead on 2 November 2013 after being kidnapped in Kidal, northern Mali.

And, although Al Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb (Aqim) claimed responsibility for the murders, inquiries by Malian and French investigators have failed to find out exactly what happened.

"In general there is little information on how the Malian judiciary is handling this case," Schneider said. "But we learned very recently that the judge who has been put in charge of the case is not part of the anti-terrorism section that was created in Bamako in 2013.

"So that’s what is so surprising, it's weird."

About 100 official documents were recently declassified by French Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian but large parts of them have been redacted, according to Schneider.

The documents are believed to have been classified because of Kidal's strategic situation, on the edge of a region that is a source of uranium for both civilian and military purposes.

What does Hollande know?

And the group wants to know what Hollande meant when he told journalists Gérard Davet and Fabrice Lhomme that French hostage Serge Lazarevic, who was freed in 2014, was "doubtless held by the people who killed the two journalists and seem to have killed [another French hostage Philippe] Verdon".

The statement is published in the book Un Président devrait pas dire ça (A President shouldn't say that), based on a series of interviews Hollande has given to the reporters throughout his term of office.

"We'd like to know more about that little phrase," Schneider commented.

The group is looking into the theory that Dupont's and Verlon's murderers were involved in negotiations to free Lazarevic.

"The circumstances of the tragedy still raise many questions," 20 journalists' associations from RFI and other media said in a statement Thursday.

"And we have the unpleasant feeling that everything possible has not been done to bring the truth to light in this affair."

 

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