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The Thomson Foundation is celebrating 60 years of promoting excellence in journalism and to mark the occasion we’re offering six rising stars the chance to connect with six of the best journalists in the industry as part of our prestigious Young Journalist Award 2022.
This year’s award will be extra special for another reason, too. It will be the first time in two years that our three finalists will be able to attend the glittering ceremony in London in person. The pandemic of the past two years has meant finalists could only attend virtually.
For our 60th anniversary there’s an added bonus which we’re calling ‘Connect 6’. To mark six decades of the foundation, our three finalists as well as the next three highest in our shortlist will have the opportunity to be mentored for six months by six established journalists from our alumni.
Entries are now open for the Young Journalist Award. It has given a boost to some brilliant journalists over the years, each one of them demonstrating a rich tapestry of investigative journalism, exposing social issues and holding power to account.
The competition closes on 12 August, 2022.
Find the entry form here.
I recommend journalists under 30 apply for this incredible opportunity! It opened so many doors for me.Yousra Elbagir, 2016 winner

Kai Hui Wong
Winner 2021
It was Kai Hui Wong’s “persistence in her investigations” which led her to reveal abuses of power that convinced the judges that the Malaysian journalist should win this year’s Thomson Foundation Young Journalist Award.
Two of the three stories submitted for the award by Kai Hui explored the damaging impact on the environment of mining projects and uncovered links to Malaysian royalty. The third looked at transgender healthcare rights in Malaysia and how the community is being “pushed towards the black market” by the country’s health system.
Read more about Kai Hui and her winning portfolio of work here.

Monika Mondal
Winner 2021 Environmental prize
It’s hard to believe that Monika Mondal only started her journalism career in 2020 at the height of the pandemic, with no formal training. She was previously a yoga teacher, prior to that, she was in engineering.
“I always wanted to speak up against the powerful, but I was always too shy and I lacked confidence,” she remembers. “Then I just decided that I would do whatever I wanted to do without overthinking it.”
Read more about Monika and her winning story about the hidden water crisis behind India's sugar dominance here.

Martín Leandro Amaya Camacho
Winner 2020
Martín Leandro Camacho has always been passionate about being compassionate.
The 27-year-old spent the formative periods of his childhood in a small fishing village called Cancas, in northern Peru. “I loved the sea and its legends,” he says, recalling his early years. “But from a young age, I could clearly see injustices all around me.”
In an interview with Thomson Foundation, Martín recounts a childhood filled with stories of inequality, talks about his mission to tell stories with humanity at their heart and why investing in the future of young girls is important to him and his “feminist activist” wife, Mirtha Chong.

Meiryum Ali
Winner 2019
Meiryum's work is remarkably different from that of previous winners and a great victory for investigative, data-based journalism. She is the first Pakistani to win the prize.
With a mix of traditional journalistic skills, compelling expression and unmistakable clarity, her explainer video of the complex data connecting former Pakistani president, Asif Ali Zardari with a high-profile money-laundering case, packs a visual punch.
The video exposé, made for the era of social media, is simultaneously bold, rigorous and humorous. However, it’s Meiryum’s simple, yet honest visual language and masterful treatment of the information that truly reveals her skills as a data journalist.

Alisa Kustikova
Winner 2018
Alisa Kustikova, an investigative reporter from Russia, won the 2018 Thomson Foundation Young Journalist Award.
Nigel Baker, chief executive of the Thomson Foundation said: "Alisa, operating in particularly difficult circumstances, showed particular investigative prowess and covered stories relevant to vulnerable citizens as well as exposing political violations. This was brave, impactful reporting.”
Alisa showed particular investigative prowess. This was brave, impactful reporting.Nigel Baker, CEO, Thomson Foundation

Waad Al Kateab
Special Recognition Award 2017
Much of Waad Al Kateab's reporting, broadcast on UK television’s Channel 4 News, was filmed in the emergency room of the Aleppo hospital where her husband, a doctor, worked.
Here she captured unimaginable suffering without intruding — a skill that takes seasoned journalists many years to master. It's this skill that was recognised by the Thomson Foundation, who presented the filmmaker with a special one-off award for Outstanding Coverage of a Continuing Story at the UK Foreign Press Association gala awards.
Her work has been seen by 500 million people. An incredible feat for someone who literally picked up a camera and taught herself.Jon Snow, presenter, Channel 4 News

Mariana Motrunych
Winner 2017
Exposing potential corruption was the theme of Mariana Motrunych’s reports. She ‘doorsteps’ the Commission’s head, who arrives to work in a shiny new Mercedes, to try and establish his sources of income. In another story, she examines the Ministry of Internal Affairs' practice of giving ‘award weapons’, including machine pistols and rifles, to people outside of government, including journalists.
Corruption costs a lot for all citizens of Ukraine so [international] attention is very important for me.Mariana Motrunych, Ukraine

Yousra Elbagir
Winner 2016
The Nuba Mountains in the southern Sudanese region has been subjected to a bloody counter-insurgency campaign since fighting broke out in 2011. Yousra Elbagir, a reporter from Sudan, chose to cover the story through the eyes of displaced Nuba in the capital haunted by the bombs raining down in their homeland and struggling to preserve their cultural identity.
It means a lot to the people in my country to have someone represent them who isn't a foreign journalist.Yousra Elbagir, Sudan

Caroline Ariba
Winner 2015
Caroline Ariba’s submissions for the award included a harrowing description of the plight of mothers in Tisai, a little known Island in Uganda’s Eastern district of Kumi. In this story, Caroline revealed how neglected its people were and how many babies died there without record of their existence. After uncovering the story, political leaders decided to speed up plans for a bridge link to the mainland.
Recognition at this level means everything and the experience of the trip has opened up doors.Caroline Ariba, Uganda

Maurice Oniang'o
Winner 2014
Always producing with passion, Thomson Foundation's 2014 award-winning documentary filmmaker, Maurice Oniang’o, submitted a portfolio of stories which included a film on child soldiers who guard their village from Ethiopian raiders. In his latest work, he addresses the problem of domestic violence against women in African countries.
The award is encouragement that your effort to bring change in society has received recognition.Maurice Oniang'o, Kenya

Judy Kosgei
Winner 2013
Words have an incredible power to move us, and as a result, effective storytelling can change society. Judy Kosgei produced a winning story in 2013 on the impact a shortage of sanitary towels was having on up to two million schoolgirls. The story has since brought about a change in the law in Kenya. All Kenyan schoolgirls will now get "free, sufficient and quality sanitary towels", the government has said.
The Young Journalist Award reaffirmed that little voice in my head that said changing lives begins with me.Judy Kosgei, Kenya
Highlights
https://youtube.com/watch?v=uB9weyXnPFg%3Fcontrols%3D1%26showinfo%3D0%26autohide%3D1%26modestbranding%3D1%26rel%3D0%26showsearch%3D0%26iv_load_policy%3D3%26enablejsapi%3D1%26origin%3Dhttps%253A%252F%252Fwww.thomsonfoundation.org%26widgetid%3D1
FPA Awards
Watch our 2015 Young Journalist finalists as they attend the FPA Awards in London, along with a host of other award winners and leading figures from the world of journalism.
Call for entries
Journalists working in the developing world and in emerging economies are invited to succeed Malaysian journalist, Kai Hui Wong, as the 2022 Thomson Foundation Young Journalist Award winner. If you are a journalist aged 30 and under working in a country with a Gross National Income (GNI) of less than $20,000, you are eligible to enter the award.
The competition closes 12 August, 2022. Apply here.
To stay up to date, follow us on Twitter or sign up to our newsletter. For any enquiries not answered on the entry form, please email awardfpa@thomsonfoundation.org.