Didi Akinyelure

Didi Akinyelure is an award-winning British/Nigerian journalist. She is a graduate of chemical engineering from the University of Nottingham. In July 2016, she won the prestigious BBC World News Komla Dumor Award. In 2018, Didi received the University of Nottingham Special Excellence Alumni Laureate Award. Didi was the face of CNBC Africa's live morning show Open Exchange, West Africa.

Didi Akinyelure
NationalityBritish/Nigerian
Alma materNottingham University
OccupationJournalist
Years active2011-present
Spouse(s)Akin Akinyelure
Children2
AwardsBBC World News Komla Dumor Award 2016, University of Nottingham Special Excellence Alumni Laureate Award 2018

Background, education and career

Didi Akinyelure is an Award-winning British/Nigerian Journalist. In 2016, she won the prestigious BBC World News Komla Dumor Award. In December 2018, Didi received the University of Nottingham Special Excellence Alumni Laureate Award. 

Didi is an accomplished multimedia journalist with extensive experience working in television, radio, text and digital for the BBC, CNBC and Reuters News Agency. 

She presented the CNBC Europe series on digital transformation titled ‘I.O.T: Powering the Digital Economy’ and BBC World Service series on climate change ‘Living on the Edge’.

She has presented, produced and edited television, radio and digital content for the BBC News at 10, BBC World News, BBC World Service, BBC Focus on Africa, BBC Business Daily, BBC Newsday, and BBC Radio 4.

Her report on female entrepreneurship was long listed in the World Bank Women Entrepreneurship reporting category at the One World Media awards in 2018.

She has been featured in Forbes Africa magazine and included in a list of the most influential business journalists in the world. 

She is a Media Entrepreneur, having created and produced her own television content, titled A Place in Africa, a Pan-African lifestyle property TV show. Akinyelure also launched REAP, a media production, reputational management and communications strategy firm.

Didi has built an impressive career as an Events Moderator and Speaker. In May 2019, she chaired a high level conversation with great minds at the United Nations in Geneva. Panelists include Dame Wendy Hall,  Nobel Laureate, Prof. Carlo Rubbia and Prof. Jurgen Schmidhuber. In 2018 she chaired a United Nations conversation with Sir Roger Penrose and Nobel Laureate Jacques Dubochet.

She also moderated a panel at the Africa CEO forum, and hosted the Africa CEO awards and gala dinner. She moderated the entrepreneurship panel at London Business School Africa Summit, and the Future Energy Africa exhibition and conference in Cape Town, South Africa.

She chaired the Africa Construction Week in Munich, Germany, anchored the ministerial panel at the Africa Oil Week in Cape Town, a panel at the Access Bank International Women's Day Conference, WimBiz, and the Africa Women Innovation and Entrepreneurship Forum. 

Prior to this, she presented the BBC Africa Debate on Fake News in Malawi and the BBC Women in Digital Journalism panel at Social Media Week in Lagos.

She also hosted the University of Nottingham Africa Summit, the Future Energy Exhibition and Conference, the West Africa Property Investment Summit, the ‘Lagos at 50’ International Conference and the ‘Lagos Kano Economic Summit’.

In September 2017, Didi was invited by the United Nations to interview delegates at the UN Convention to Combat Desertification in Ordos, China.

Didi has interviewed notable political figures and global business leaders.

Prior to her career in journalism, Akinyelure worked at Barclays Wealth in London.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7]

gollark: The resistor behaves ohmically and the current through both things is the same.
gollark: IIRC, if we assume the LED is an ideal diode, it'll just always have a 2V potential difference across it (if there's more than 2V in the circuit and also it is the right way round oops).
gollark: Well, that would actually have been right if you used the right units then added 2, possibly.
gollark: Not just... multiply... them?
gollark: I'm pretty sure you'd have to work out what voltage across the resistor would give you 20mA through it, then add 2 to it for the LED.

References

  1. Editor. "Didi Akinyelure: Driven by dreams". The Guardian. Retrieved 6 August 2016.CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link)
  2. "BBC - Didi Akinyelure Awarded the Second BBC World News Komla Dumor Award - Media Centre". www.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 30 July 2016.
  3. "Who is Komla Dumor Award winner Didi Akinyelure? - BBC News". BBC News. Retrieved 30 July 2016.
  4. "Nigeria’s Didi Akinyelure wins BBC World News Komla Dumor Award", Bella Naija, 19 July 2016.
  5. "Nigerian journalist Didi Akinyelure wins Komla Dumor Award", Focus on Africa, BBC World Service, 19 July 2016.
  6. "Be Inspired! CNBC Africa’s Entrepreneur of the Week Show Features Inspiring Nigerian Women in Business", Bella Naija, 17 April 2016}}
  7. "About Didi". www.didiakin.com. Retrieved 27 July 2018.
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