Yusuf Abramjee GCOB is a South African journalist and anti-crime activist. He has won numerous awards for his journalism,[1] and activism, and serves as a social cohesion ambassador for the South African government.[2]
Yusuf Abramjee | |
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Born | 1963 or 1964 (age 60–61) Lady Selborne, Pretoria, South Africa |
Occupation(s) | Journalist and activist |
Biography
editEarly life and education
editYusuf Abramjee was born and grew up in Lady Selborne, an area north west of the Pretoria CBD. Abramjee's father Ebrahim "Boetie" Abramjee later served in the House of Delegates as an MP. Abramjee's family was the last to leave Lady Selborne, in 1984, as a consequence of the Group Areas Act, moving to Laudium, an Indian township in Pretoria.[1]
Abramjee attended Laudium Secondary School, where he edited the school paper,[3] matriculating in 1982, and then studied at the Transvaal College of Education, a teacher's training college Laudium.[2][4]
Career
editAfter graduating in 1985, Abramjee taught Afrikaans at Laudium Secondary School, before taking a job with the House of Delegates as a spokesman, and then joining the SABC. He later owned and edited a local newspaper, the Laudium Sun.[1]
Abramjee freelanced for Radio 702 ahead of South Africa's first non-racial election in 1994. He joined 702 on a permanent basis as a crime reporter in 1995, becoming crime editor in 1996 for Radio 702 and 567 Cape Talk, another station owned by Primedia. He won several awards for his reporting, and was eventually promoted to station manager of 702, before becoming Primedia's head of news and talk programming. He was chairman of the National Press Club on a few occasions.[1]
Activism
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Abramjee was a founder of Crime Line in South Africa, a crime tip-off line, in collaboration with the government.[5] He was a prominent opponent of South Africa's "Secrecy Bill".[1] He helped found LeadSA, which "aims to celebrate efforts of ordinary South Africans to do good". He was reappointed as a social cohesion ambassador by the Arts and Culture Minister in 2019.[2] He also helped coordinate private relief efforts during the Covid-19 pandemic.[6]
Personal life
editAbramjee is married, with two adult sons, and lives in Erasmia.[1]
Criticism
editAbramjee was accused of self-promotion[7] in 2015 by journalist, and former editor of the Cape Times, Ryland Fisher, who nonetheless described Abramjee as a patriot. Fisher was responding to a controversy involving Abramjee when he penned an open letter to then-president Jacob Zuma, calling for the government to act on the crime problem in South Africa.[7]
Honours, decorations, awards and distinctions
edit- Order of the Baobab, 2014[4]
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f "Yusuf Abramjee". Sunday Tribune.
- ^ a b c "Yusuf Abramjee: A champion of social cohesion". Pretoria News.
- ^ "Yusuf Abramjee a man of many hats". Pretoria News.
- ^ a b "Yusuf Abramjee – LeadSA representative | The Presidency".
- ^ "Crime Line successes taking off | South African Government". www.gov.za.
- ^ Grobler, Riaan. "WATCH | Lockdown: Queues for kilometres as 11 000 food parcels distributed in Pretoria". News24.
- ^ a b Fisher, Ryland (22 September 2015). "Give #DearYusuf a break". Daily Maverick.