A new program trains Ghana journalists to cover China stories better. The Africa-China Centre for Policy and Advisory started the Ghana-China Media Fellowship 2025 on June 14. Fifteen experienced reporters from Ghana media companies joined the first meeting at the center's North Legon office. The training runs for twelve weeks and covers lectures, language classes, and business meetings.
Paul Frimpong runs the center and leads the program. He calls the launch a bold move toward smarter media coverage. The program wants to build journalists who can study and share Africa-China stories with depth and clear writing. Sylvia Sinkari says the timing makes sense because China's power keeps growing. Reporters need proper tools to explain and question China's part in African development.
Reporters already like what they see from the program. Sandra Ampofoa Ofosu works at Metro TV and calls the start remarkable. She thanks the center for making this chance happen and sees the fellowship as a way to reach bigger chances. Esther Ampomah Larbi from JoyNews says the meeting brought learning and good talks. The fellowship continues for eleven more weeks to help media workers share knowledge about Ghana and China.
Paul Frimpong runs the center and leads the program. He calls the launch a bold move toward smarter media coverage. The program wants to build journalists who can study and share Africa-China stories with depth and clear writing. Sylvia Sinkari says the timing makes sense because China's power keeps growing. Reporters need proper tools to explain and question China's part in African development.
Reporters already like what they see from the program. Sandra Ampofoa Ofosu works at Metro TV and calls the start remarkable. She thanks the center for making this chance happen and sees the fellowship as a way to reach bigger chances. Esther Ampomah Larbi from JoyNews says the meeting brought learning and good talks. The fellowship continues for eleven more weeks to help media workers share knowledge about Ghana and China.