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Ugandan journalist Nancy Kacungira wins BBC World News Komla Dumor Award

Nancy Kacungira

What you need to know:

The award was established to honour Komla Dumor, a presenter for BBC World News, who died suddenly aged 41.

A Ugandan journalist, Nancy Kacungira has won the first BBC World News Komla Dumor Award. She’s a television anchor for Kenya's KTN television channel, was selected from nearly 200 applicants. She will spend three months at the BBC in London and also report from Africa for the BBC TV, radio and online.

The award was established to honour Komla Dumor, a presenter for BBC World News, who died suddenly aged 41.

Ms Kacungira said: "To be a part of continuing Komla's legacy is such an honour it feels almost like a dream. I will do my very best to justify the great trust that I have been awarded, and ensure that the benefit of this opportunity goes far beyond myself."

One of the judges, BBC Africa's current affairs editor, Vera Kwakofi, said: "Nancy is incredibly smart with a breadth and depth to her knowledge and experience that comes across instantly."

The BBC's Director of News and Current Affairs James Harding, said: "When Komla Dumor died, it was an enormous loss to the BBC, to Africa and to all of us personally.

Nancy grew up in Uganda where she attended Makerere University in Kampala. She has more than 14 years of experience working across a range of media in Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania as well as a Master’s degree in communications from Leeds University.

She is currently the anchor of Prime Time Evening News on KTN where she is also the channel's social media editor.

Komla Dumor was an exceptional Ghanaian broadcaster who in his short life made an extraordinary impact - in Ghana, in Africa and around the world.

He represented a confident, savvy and entrepreneurial side of Africa.

Through his tenacious journalism and compelling storytelling, Komla worked tirelessly to bring a more nuanced African narrative to the world.

Source: BBC