Stevan Dojčinović, editor in chief of Crime and Corruption Reporting Network – KRIK, won an international award for an investigative story as member of OCCRP team.
The prize, announced every two years, honors tenacious investigative journalists, often working under perilous conditions in developing or transitioning countries, for investigating crime and corruption.
The ninth GIJC, held in the Norwegian ski resort of Lillehammer, hosted over 850 journalists from 120 countries – a record for such an event.
In the course of four days, journalists, publishers and experts presented the results of their work, holding training sessions, round tables and debates in a total of 160 events.
The conference ended with the Global Shining Awards ceremony. Journalists affiliated with OCCRP won two of the three awards.
First place was jointly awarded to OCCRP for the 2014 story Unholy Alliances and Gazeta do Povo for its 2014 story on tobacco and organized crime, Empire of Ashes.
OCCRP’s year-long investigation uncovered links between organized crime, government bodies and businesses in Montenegro, incriminating long-serving Prime Minister Milo Djukanovic and showing how the country effectively functions as a “mafia state”.
Montenegro is currently a candidate country for the European Union.
The story was written and researched by Miranda Patrucic (OCCRP), Dejan Milovac (MANS), Stevan Dojcinovic (KRIK) and Lejla Camdzic (OCCRP) with editing by Drew Sullivan, Jody McPhillips and Rosemary Armao.
“OCCRP and its reporters have been aggressively attacked by media linked to organized crime and governments for this story. It is great that fellow journalists recognize this hard work and it helps us deal with these attacks,” said OCCRP editor Drew Sullivan.
The jury also honored project YanukovychLeaks, which exposed the corruption of the former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych. Thanks to investigative reporters, 25,000 pages of documents that Yanukovych’s associates tried to destroy were preserved and trawled for information and stories. The documents now form part of the prosecution’s evidence in proceedings against Yanukovych and his associates.
For this year’s Global Shining Light Award there were 76 submissions from 34 countries, all of which were stories published between January 1, 2013 and December 31, 2014.
Colombia University Professor and GIJC judge Sheila Coronel said the winners “uphold the highest standards of investigative reporting . . . [these awards] show us that the flame of journalism remains alive, even in the most trying of circumstances”.