AFP Fact Check video playlists win WAN-IFRA's Digital Media Awards Worldwide
AFP’s Fact Check video playlists, “How to Verify Information Online” have been awarded the 2024 Digital Media Awards Worldwide in the ‘Best Fact Checking Project’ category.
Kandahar (AFP) | 06/12/2025 - 06:47:47 | Afghan authorities say 4 civilians killed in Pakistan border clash
Miami (AFP) | 06/12/2025 - 00:12:27 | US, Ukraine to meet for third day, say 'real progress' depends on Russia
Los Angeles (AFP) | 05/12/2025 - 20:51:39 | Star architect Frank Gehry dead at 96: office
Washington (AFP) | 05/12/2025 - 20:21:31 | US Supreme Court to weigh Trump bid to end birthright citizenship
Riyadh (AFP) | 05/12/2025 - 20:03:34 | Mediators Egypt, Qatar, others 'concerned' about Israel opening one-way Gaza exit
Brasília (AFP) | 05/12/2025 - 20:00:42 | Flavio Bolsonaro says father named him political heir
The Hague (AFP) | 05/12/2025 - 19:34:15 | Hearing in absentia of Putin, Netanyahu 'conceivable': ICC dep. prosecutor to AFP
The Hague (AFP) | 05/12/2025 - 19:33:28 | ICC dep. prosecutor on US sanctions: Don't equate us with drug traffickers
Berlin (AFP) | 05/12/2025 - 18:33:35 | EU's frozen assets plan risks 'far-reaching consequences': Russian ambassador
Washington (AFP) | 05/12/2025 - 18:16:23 | Rubio slams EU fining of X as attack on 'the American people'
AFP’s Fact Check video playlists, “How to Verify Information Online” have been awarded the 2024 Digital Media Awards Worldwide in the ‘Best Fact Checking Project’ category.
Agence France-Presse (AFP) is launching a new online course in digital investigation and fact-checking designed to train journalists and journalism students to navigate the growing challenges of disinformation surrounding elections throughout the world.
AFP Social Stories, a dynamic format that packages the best of the Agency’s photos and videos for social media, is now even better. In addition to the French and English formats already available, AFP is now offering a ‘raw’ format enabling clients to customise content in their own language and with their own brand identity.
AFP photographer Christina Assi, who was severely injured on assignment last October in Lebanon, will carry the Olympic Flame on Sunday, 21 July, in Vincennes, France, "to pay tribute to those who have fallen" while doing their job as journalists, she explained.
Christina Assi, 29, was struck by a tank shell on October 13, 2023 while reporting on cross-border clashes between the Israeli army and armed groups in southern Lebanon, alongside six other colleagues.
The Dutch University INholland launched on May 13, 2024, fabricated, an interactive educational initiative designed by its Sustainable Media Lab, in partnership with AFP.
In preparation for the European parliamentary elections between June 6-9, Agence France-Presse (AFP) is working on multiple projects to help fight the spread of disinformation, promote electoral integrity and uphold democratic values across the continent.
From June 6th to June 9th, more than 400 million European citizens will elect a new five-year parliament. On this occasion, the European Data News Hub (EDNH) is releasing ‘‘European Elections: A How-To Guide’’, an interactive guide available in 9 languages compiled by AFP and the other 5 European press agencies partnering with the EDNH.
The 2x52’ mini-series, available from 25 November on arte.tv and broadcast on 2 December on Arte. It is a FACTSTORY/SEPPIA coproduction for Arte and the Swedish channel SVT with the participation of TVP and Histoire TV.
During a meeting on April 25, 2024, the AFP Board of Directors approved the accounts for the 2023 financial year, which confirm that the Agency’s financial recovery is continuing.
Total turnover was stable (+0,1%), at 320.1 million euros.
Operating expenses were 297 million euros, a decrease of 0.4 percent (- 1.2 million euros) compared to 2022 at comparable exchange rates.
Chris Otton, a journalist with a distinguished international career, started this week as the deputy to the editor-in-chief of Agence France-Presse, Sophie Huet.
Chris Otton, a 52-year-old British journalist, first worked in London for the Press Association and later joined the AFP Asia-Pacific desk in Hong Kong in 2001.