Winners announced in scriptwriting competition on smallholder farmer innovation!
Congratulations to John Cheburet, a journalist from The Organic Farmer, a magazine and a radio show aired on the Kenya Broadcasting Corporation, who won first prize in an Africa-wide scriptwriting competition on smallholder farmer innovation. Fourteen other radio broadcasters and producers also won prizes for their entries.
In July 2009, radio professionals from across sub-Saharan Africa were invited to submit a radio script about an innovative smallholder farmer in their area. To help participants develop their scripts, they were encouraged to participate in a free two-month online training course on scriptwriting. Eighty-two entries were received from 20 countries across sub-Saharan Africa.
The first-prize winner impressed an international panel of judges with his script about an innovative Kenyan farmer who uses sawdust to lengthen the storage period of Irish potatoes. His prize is a study visit at the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) headquarters in Rome, Italy. This award is sponsored by FAO.
Lydia Ajono from the Ghana Community Radio Network won the award for the best entry by a community radio broadcaster for her script about a woman farmer who grows henna plants and sells them for processing into dyes and cosmetics. The World Association of Community Radio Broadcasters (AMARC) will sponsor her trip to the AMARC 10 conference, to be held in Argentina in November 2010. Rosemary Nyaole-Kowuor from Shine FM in Kenya received the Marie Coulibaly Award for the top entry by a woman for her script on sack farming. Sack farming involves putting soil and composted materials into a plastic bag and growing vegetables in the “sack.” This is a very useful innovation for those without land. She will receive a certificate recognizing her achievement.
All 15 winners will receive high quality digital audio recorders sponsored by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) and Inter Press Service (IPS) Africa. Winners will also work with Farm Radio International’s managing editor, using feedback received from contest judges, to improve and finalize their scripts. The 15 winning scripts will then be published in French and English and distributed by Farm Radio International to approximately 500 radio organizations across sub-Saharan Africa. They will then be transformed into a wide variety of programs and shared with a rural audience of millions of farmers.
The winners and script titles in alphabetical order by country are:
- Felix Houinsou, Benin -Using weaver ants to protect fruit trees frompests
- Issakou Yagui Assouma, Benin -Crush the maize stalk to preserve the grains
- Adama Zongo, Burkina Faso -The pump mill
- LydiaAjono, Ghana -The miracle local plant “zabila/lelle” or henna plant: The turning point for food security for a smallholder woman farmer in northern Ghana
- Gabriel Adukpo, Ghana -A farmer suffocates stem borers to death and saves his cocoa farm
- Rosemond Ohene, Ghana-A farmer protects his young oil palm seedlings from rodents with jatropha
- John Cheburet, Kenya -Sawdust prolongs the storage life of potatoes
- StanleyNyakwana Ongwae, Kenya -Women re-invent hanging gardens technology to solve land crisis
- Rosemary Nyaole-Kowuor, Kenya -Sack farming: Unlimited vegetable harvest
- Fredrick Mariwa, Kenya -A local farmer in Kenya uses water hyacinth to produce chicken feed
- Andrew Mahiyu, Malawi -Innovative farmer uses animal dung to protect his crops by fending off hungry goats
- Gladson Makowa, Malawi-What fattens pigs is still a mystery
- Lamine Togola, Mali -Composting, the best practice for improving soil fertility: The case of Dien
- Assétou Sidibe, Mali- Scarecrows and cassette tapes protect rice fields from predatory birds
- Lazarus Laiser, Tanzania- Transforming bicycles into a vehicle of innovation
Farm Radio International carried out the scriptwriting competition in collaboration with the Commonwealth of Learning (COL), UNESCO, FAO, the Government of Canada through the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA), the Donner Foundation, the World Association of Community Radio Broadcasters (AMARC), IPS Africa, and the Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation (CTA).
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For more information about the competition and winners, contact:
Blythe McKay, Development Communication Coordinator, Farm Radio International, bmckay@farmradio.org or 613-761-3652.


Congratulation to the winner, for those who did not happen to win let’s wait for next opportunity
@Liliane Kambirigi
Thanks for the encouragement Liliane.
Sincere congratulations to John Cheburet and all 14 winners. This is a true encouragement to do better next time and continue to be the voice of the rural world.
Liliane
Information/Communication (FAO, Rome)
thank you for the announcing!!!!!!!!!
althoug I got basic knowledge about radio production ,in the next round of computionn I will struggule to win !
dere
Hi good people. Congratulations to all winners of the script writing competition.
Definitely, good ideas were put forth and I look forward to sharing in the many innovations submitted. But I guess at the end of the day what the training and script competition says is that farmers have something to offer. Our farmers are creative and many are proactively engaged in addressing the challenges they face in and out of their farms.
Many thanks to our esteemed facilitators, Benson and Wellington for being there for time, effort and being there for us participants throughout the training.
As Andrew has aptly put, “we are not where we were”. We are better journalists. I join him in remembering the farmer innovation, story based approach, focus statement, Azibo’s assignment, Group tasks…..Team Aloe, Ficus, Baobab, writing for radio, writing for the ear, and the list goes on.
Many thanks to farm radio for the learning opportunity. As they say here in Kenya, ‘tuko pamoja’, – ‘we are together’
Be blessed.
Cheburet John – Kenya
Congratulations to my fellow broadcasters whose scripts have won.
And to those who have not made it in the top 15, please do not lose hope. The most important thing is that we had a chance to learn online, We are not where we were. We are somewhere.Remember the Eight Steps, The Focus Statement, Topical Thinking and many more. These have taken us somewhere and we will also recieve Certificates. In addition we are all going to enjoy each and every script that entered the competetion. We will share with our audience wherever we are. I have already started enjoyng the topics that have been listed above and I know the main staff will make my audience enjoy my programme. Don’t you think so?
To Farm Radio
Please continue putting us together so that we continue sharing broadcasting ideas. Keep it up Please!!!
Andrew Mahiyu – Malawi