The article, titled The Year of the Shahed<\/a>, was one of ten winners selected by Sigma from a total of 591 submissions by more than 300 news organisations.<\/p>\n
A still image from the article<\/p><\/div>\n
Commenting on the article, the Sigma prize committee said: “The increasing digitisation, mechanisation, and automatisation of warfare is a worrying trend that will likely accelerate in years to come. This story about affordable but highly effective Iranian drones (actually, pseudo-missiles) used by Russia in Ukraine is a good example of what investigative and data journalism can do to warn readers about such trends.”<\/p>\n
“The piece combines in-depth data analysis of attack patterns, first-person accounts of their consequences, and plenty of context of both the history of this weaponry and of the way it\u2019s operated. The story weaves the narrative with photographic and audio evidence, along with a simple but effective series of data visualizations, scrollytelling sequences, and well-executed vector 3D renderings of the drones. In summary, it\u2019s a rich multimedia experience.”<\/p>\n
The article was written by Sanjana Varghese, Nikolaj Houmann Mortensen, Iryna Chupryna and Rowena De Silva of Airwars, as well as Oliver Imhof and Alexander Epp of Der Spiegel. It was designed visually by Airwars’ J\u00falia Nueno and Azul De Monte.<\/p>\n
Among the other projects recognised by the judges were international news organisations including the Financial Times and Bloomberg, as well as local news organisations in Nigeria, Bangladesh and elsewhere.<\/p>\n
The full award ceremony can be viewed below and Nikolaj Houmann Mortensen will discuss the article at a panel discussion<\/a> during the International Journalism Festival 2024 in Perugia, Italy on April 20, 2024.<\/p>\n
Separately, Airwars received three nominations for the forthcoming Amnesty Media Awards<\/a>. The awards celebrate vital stories related to issues of human rights, with the winners to be announced on on May 9th, 2024.<\/p>\n
The longform reportage<\/a> from Iraq, written by Emma Graham-Harrison of The Guardian and Airwars’ Joe Dyke, was nominated for Best Written Feature, while the Airwars immersive article<\/a> was nominated in the digital creativity section. The entire investigation has also been nominated in the Outstanding Investigative Reporting<\/a> category at the forthcoming Fetisov Awards.<\/p>\n