Festival Visa pour l'image: the Golden Visa for Digital Information awarded to the web documentary "Africa's Rising Cities"
Idumota Market, Lagos, Nigeria, June 22, 2021. © FTWP - Andrew Esiebo
Text by: RFI Follow
3 mins
The jury of the Visa d'or de l'Information numérique France info awarded, this Thursday, September 1 in Perpignan, its prize to the web documentary "Africa's Rising Cities", directed by Max Bearak, Júlia Ledur and Dylan Moriarty, for the daily website
The Washington Post
.
A vast survey that testifies to the extremely rapid growth of African cities and its multiple challenges.
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“Africa's Rising Cities” draws a dizzying conclusion.
Due to rampant urbanization in Africa, dozens of cities will join the ranks of the world's largest megacities by 2100. Several recent studies predict that by the end of this century, Africa will be the only continent with experiencing population growth.
Thirteen of the world's 20 largest urban areas will be in Africa - up from just two today - as will more than a third of the world's population.
The whole problem is that most of these future megalopolises are already failing to provide a decent environment for the vast majority of their inhabitants.
The
Washington Post
team delivers a production that is both aesthetically successful and well documented.
The figures, which are particularly impressive, are presented throughout the web documentary in the form of dynamic infographics which give a very concrete idea of the explosion of the urban population.
We thus learn that Lagos, the economic capital of Nigeria, already completely congested, could go from between 15 to 20 million inhabitants currently to 80, even 100 million in 2100. While the city of Kinshasa, capital of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, would increase from 15 to 60 million inhabitants.
Gross inequalities
But “Africa's Rising Cities” gives particular importance to reporting – with photos, videos and texts – in five cities on the African continent (Lagos, Khartoum, Kinshasa, Mombasa and Abidjan).
The floor is given to their inhabitants who testify about their daily life and the difficulties they face in areas that are already overpopulated and insufficiently equipped to meet transport, sanitation, health or employment needs.
We also note the glaring inequalities between a majority of dilapidated, poor, underserved neighborhoods and islands for the privileged where a minority lives with a flash of wealth, particularly in Lagos and Kinshasa.
The authors have nevertheless avoided the pitfall of repetition, by choosing a different theme for each city.
Thereby,
Rush hour, Port-Bouet market, Abidjan, Ivory Coast August 5, 2021. © Aicha Fall for The Washington Post
"The jury wished to reward 'Africa's Rising Cities', for the importance of the subject dealt with by the
Washington Post
, the diversity of the angles chosen, the richness of the treatments both in the strength of the testimonies and in the use of images and cartographic data on a global problem that goes beyond the borders of the African continent",
estimated the members of the jury, at the end of their deliberation, on August 26th.
"A special mention was also awarded to "Ukraine 2022: The "sonoramas" of reporter Eric Bouvet", an independent project produced with Amaury Mestre de Laroque and broadcast on Youtube, for the strength and intimacy of the testimonies of a photographer day to day on a battlefield,”
the jury said.
The latter was composed, this year, of Samuel Bollendorff (photographer and director), Christophe Champin (assistant to the director of RFI, in charge of digital), Agnès Chauveau (deputy general manager at INA), Benoît Leprince (first secretary of writing for
the Sunday newspaper
), Lucas Menget (deputy editorial director of franceinfo), Eric Scherer (director of the MediaLab for Information and International Affairs at France Télévisions) and Gaïa Tripoli (head of photography at the
New York Times
).
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To discover:
"Africa's Rising Cities"
"Ukraine 2022: Reporter Eric Bouvet's "sonoramas"
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