Kenya’s census campaign wins global PR award
By John Stephen Katende
8th Nov 2010
A Kenyan campaign which sparked widespread participation in the country’s 2009 population census has been chosen for the 2010 United Nations Grand Award for outstanding achievement in public relations.
The award was presented on the 5th of November at a ceremony in London by Afsane Bassir-Pour, the Director of the UN Regional Information Centre for Western Europe as part of the 2010 International Public Relations Association [IPRA] Golden World Awards.
The winning campaign dubbed “Nipo Natambulika” or “Count Me In” was commissioned by the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics and developed by Apex Communications Limited [ACL].
It was designed to not only present the census as an important national exercise but also to dispel cynicism about how the gathered information would be used, especially where it touches on the matters of ethnicity.
As a result of the campaign, 98 per cent of Kenya’s 12 million households participated in the survey, the highest rate since independence in 1963. The campaign engaged faith-based organizations, particularly Christian and Muslim groups.
A major thread running through the campaign which helped present the census as a unifying national force was its logo. Three design elements represented a household: black for the man; green for the woman, and red for the child, all reaching out to be counted as Kenyans.
The annual award is jointly sponsored by the UN Department of Public Information and IPRA, a professional organization for senior international PR executives.
The UN Award was established in 1990 to recognize excellence in campaigns that address priority issues before the world Organization. END. Please log into www.ugandacorrespondent.com every Monday to read our top stories and anytime mid-week for our news updates.