Topshots of the Week (24-30 December, 2022)
Selection of some of the most striking photographs taken by AFP photojournalists this past week (24-30 December, 2022).
Paris (AFP) | 21/12/2025 - 11:03:43 | Putin's readiness to speak with Macron 'welcome': French presidency
Jerusalem (AFP) | 21/12/2025 - 09:45:43 | Israel's security cabinet approves 19 new settlements in West Bank: statement
Moscow (AFP) | 21/12/2025 - 09:43:10 | Kremlin denies three-way US-Ukraine-Russia talks in preparation: Russian agencies
Sydney (AFP) | 21/12/2025 - 08:53:24 | Australia falls silent for Bondi Beach shooting victims
San Francisco (AFP) | 21/12/2025 - 05:51:10 | San Francisco hit by electricity outage affecting 130,000 residents: utility
Johannesburg (AFP) | 21/12/2025 - 05:12:25 | Gunmen kill 10 people in South Africa shooting: police
Phnom Penh (AFP) | 21/12/2025 - 03:55:58 | Over 500,000 displaced in Cambodia by Thai border clashes: interior ministry
Sydney (AFP) | 21/12/2025 - 02:25:57 | Australian PM orders police, intelligence review
Caracas (AFP) | 21/12/2025 - 00:54:06 | Venezuela calls latest US oil tanker seizure 'theft and kidnapping'
Washington (AFP) | 20/12/2025 - 21:51:50 | US intercepts oil tanker off coast of Venezuela: US media
Selection of some of the most striking photographs taken by AFP photojournalists this past week (24-30 December, 2022).
AFP Digital Courses has been named a finalist in the ‘Product, Innovation or Service’ category in Education, Art & Culture at the 4th Annual Anthem Awards.
Selected from among 2,300 projects across 34 countries, this recognition highlights the platform’s positive social impact through its innovative training in digital investigation techniques.
AFP, in association with the European Fact-Checking Standards Network (EFCSN) and other European stakeholders, is participating in EFCSN’s first annual conference in Brussels on October 29, 2024.
On the occasion of World News Day, a global awareness campaign aimed at promoting fact-based journalism organised by WAN-IFRA, Fabrice Fries wrote the following op-ed.
The spectacular decline of the journalism profession is met with alarming indifference. The worst part is that we are getting used to it.
AFP's Global News Director, Phil Chetwynd, delivered the keynote address titled “Why Journalism Still Matters” at the 2024 inaugural lecture of Sciences Po’s School of Journalism.
In his speech, Chetwynd discussed the most pressing challenges faced by journalists and media organisations today, including the emergence of AI, increasing attacks on the press, and ongoing disputes with digital platforms over revenue and copyright.
Alongside hundreds of other news organizations, media support associations, and individuals from over 100 countries, AFP has committed to raise awareness about World News Day.
On 19 and 20 September, AFP took part in the annual General Assembly of ADEPA (Asociación de Entidades Periodísticas Argentinas), the influential association of Argentine media, held in Posadas, in the north of the country.
Agence France-Presse (AFP) has appointed Guillaume Meyer as Deputy News Director for Video and Audio.
Meyer, 43, currently holds the position of Global Editor-in-Chief for Video and is the first journalist from the video department to step into this management role. He succeeds Juliette Hollier-Larousse, who has held the position since 2017.
AFP Chairman and CEO, Fabrice Fries, expresses concern in an op-ed in Le Monde about the suspension of fact-checking on Meta's social media platforms.
Agence France-Presse was created in the tumult of World War II by a band of resistance journalists who stormed a pro-Nazi newsroom and took over five days before Paris was liberated.
By Juliette Baillot
It was August 20, 1944, two days after Resistance leader Henri Rol-Tanguy had called Parisians into action against the Nazis who had occupied their city for four years.