
Paris headquarters of AFP

Charles Havas
'Agence France-Presse' ('AFP') is the oldest
news agency in the world, and one of the three largest with
Associated Press and
Reuters. It is also the largest
French news agency.
AFP is based in
Paris, with regional centres in
Washington,
Hong Kong,
Nicosia, and
Montevideo and
bureaus in 110 countries. It transmits news in
French,
English,
Arabic,
Spanish,
German,
Portuguese, and
Russian.
History
The agency was founded in
1835 by a Parisian translator and advertising agent,
Charles-Louis Havas as ''
Agence Havas''. Two of his employees,
Julius Reuter and Bernhard Wolff, later set up rival news agencies in London and Berlin respectively. In order to reduce overheads and develop the lucrative advertising side of the business, Havas’s sons, who had succeeded him in 1852, signed agreements with Reuter and Wolff, giving each news agency an exclusive reporting zone in different parts of Europe. This arrangement lasted until the 1930s, when the invention of short-wave wireless improved and cut communications costs. To help Havas extend the scope of its reporting at a time of great international tension, the French government financed up to 47 % of its investments.
When German forces occupied France in 1940, the news agency was taken over by the authorities and renamed the French Information Office (FIO); only the private advertising company retained the name Havas.
On August 20, 1944, as Allied forces moved on Paris, a group of journalists in the French Resistance seized the offices of the FIO and issued the first news dispatch from the liberated city under the name of Agence France-Presse.
Established as a state enterprise, AFP devoted the post-war years to developing its network of international correspondents. One of them was the first Western journalist to report the death of Joseph Stalin, on March 6, 1953.
AFP was keen to shake off its semi-official status, and on January 10, 1957 the French parliament passed a law establishing its independence. Since that date, the proportion of the agency’s revenues generated by subscriptions from government departments has steadily declined.
In 1982, the agency began to decentralize its editorial decision-making by setting up the first of its four autonomous regional centres, in Hong Kong. Each region has its own budget, administrative director and chief editor.
Status
AFP is a government-chartered
public corporation operating under a
1957 law, but is officially a commercial business independent of the
French government. AFP is administered by a
CEO and a board comprising 15 members:
★ Eight representatives of the French
press;
★ Two representatives of the AFP
personnel;
★ Two representatives of the government-owned
radio and
television;
★ Three representatives of the government. One is named by the
prime minister, another by the
minister of finance, and a third by the
minister of foreign affairs.
The board elects the CEO for a renewable term of three years. The AFP also has a council charged with ensuring that the agency operates according to its statutes, which mandate absolute
independence and neutrality.
Editorially, AFP is governed by a network of senior journalists. By statute, AFP ’s mission is to report events, free of “all influences or considerations likely to impair the exactitude” of its news. And “under no circumstances to pass under the legal or actual control of an ideological, political or economic group.”
The primary client of AFP is the French government, which purchases subscriptions for its various services. In practice, those subscriptions are an indirect
subsidy to AFP. The statutes of the agency prohibit direct government subsidies.
Investments
Notable investments include:
★ 'AFP GmbH':
AFP GmbH is the subsidiary of AFP in Germany, producing German-language services for local press, internet and corporate clients.
★ 'SID':
Sport-Informations-Dienst (SID) is producing a German-language sports service.
Staged photos
''Wissam al-Okaili'', a journalist working for AFP, was in August 2007 accused of manufacturing obviously staged photos with faulty descriptions, when the same women at two different occasions claims to have been shot at: the bullets she shows for documentations clearly never have been fired
[1] [2].
References
1. Credulous photojournalism of the day Updates
2. Magic Bullets Discovered in Sadr City by AFP Photographer
External links
★
AFP website