asakiyume: (miroku)
Earlier this year I talked about how IRIN, an award-winning, Nairobi-based news network that operated under the auspices of the United Nations, was going to be shut down. (Entry here.) I started a "Save IRIN" petition, and the petition and people's outcry did get a bit of coverage, but it was clear that willy-nilly, the UN was going to "spin off" the network, which would only survive if it got funding from somewhere.

Well, a funder has been found: IRIN made the announcement of its relaunch yesterday, saying

A new beginning starting January 1, 2015 will be made possible with an initial commitment of US $25 million, to be disbursed over several years, from the Hong Kong-based Jynwel Charitable Foundation. The new IRIN will be based in Switzerland, with support from the UK- based Overseas Development Institute’s (ODI) Humanitarian Policy Group. (Source)

Their relaunch video has the tagline, local voices, expert analysis:

IRIN Teaser from New IRIN on Vimeo.

I'm glad IRIN will continue to exist; their reporting really is excellent. I wish they could have maintained more of their reporters on salary; going forward, it seems that most (all?) will now have "contributor" status ("A network of 150 contributors will be edited by a small team of specialists, analysts and reporters" --"What We Do"), which I imagine as being essentially freelance status. But that's journalism today, I guess, and I shouldn't let that fact dim the overall good news about IRIN's reprieve.


asakiyume: (feathers on the line)
Jaspreet was showing me IRIN videos that somehow I hadn't found on my own, including a whole series relating to climate change (including one focusing on Bangladesh's floating gardens, which I hadn't realized are a generations-old tradition in some areas).

And--you know how in the Philippines there are school bus boats (that I wrote about here)? Well in Bangladesh there are actual floating boat-schools, which allow children to continue their education uninterrupted by the monsoon season. They're the brainchild of Mohammed Rezwan, an architect-turned-philanthropist, who himself was often forced to miss school in his childhood due to monsoons.

The Gathering Storm: Boat School


Walking to the shore, where the boat school waits


School doors are open


Inside the boat school classroom


(The teacher in the video has a rather harsh and authoritarian air about her, but all the same, going to school in a floating, solar-electrified boat must be awesome.)

More on the boat schools in this New York Times article by Amy Yee: "‘Floating Schools’ Bring Classrooms to Stranded Students"

ETA: [livejournal.com profile] heliopausa points out that there are also floating schools in Halong Bay, Vietnam--very lovely-looking ones.

ETA 2: Ijeoma Umebinyou mentioned the Makoko floating school in Lagos--here's a picture of it under construction:




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