AQ

Angela Quintal

Africa Program Head at Committee to Protect Journalists

Angela Quintal is an experienced journalist and editor, currently serving as the Africa Program Head at the Committee to Protect Journalists since July 2016, after previously holding the role of Africa Program Coordinator. Quintal's career includes significant positions such as Editor at Mail & Guardian and The Natal Witness, as well as various editorial roles at Independent Newspapers, including Editor of The Mercury and Executive Editor of The Star. With a foundation in political journalism developed during tenures at the South African Press Association and This Day, Angela Quintal has a comprehensive background in reporting, editing, and media leadership. Quintal holds a B Journ LLB in Journalism and Law from Rhodes University, earned between 1986 and 1991.

Location

New York, United States

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Committee to Protect Journalists

Committee to Protect Journalists, which is also known as CPJ, is an independent, non-profit organization that promotes press freedom worldwide. Committee to Protect Journalists promotes press freedom worldwide and defends the right of journalists to report news without fear of reprisal.Committee to Protect Journalists ensures the free flow ofnews and commentary by taking action wherever journalists are attacked, imprisoned, killed, kidnapped, threatened, censored, or harassed.Committee to Protect Journalists' first advocacy campaign was held in 1982 by giving precedence to the idea that journalists around the world should come together to defend the rights of colleagues working in repressive and dangerous environments. At the time, three British journalists:Simon Winchester, Ian Mather, and Tony Prime were arrested in Argentina while covering the Falklands War. A letter from Committee to Protect Journalists Honorary Chairman Walter Cronkite helped spring them from prison.Every year Committee to Protect Journalists organizes International Press Freedom Awards, an annual recognition of courageous reporting, to honor journalists who have faced imprisonment, violence, and censorship.Committee to Protect Journalists was founded in 1981 by a group of U.S. correspondents.