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How journalists from across globe worked as one family at G20 media centre

On these three days, scribes and camerapersons from Italy to Singapore and Turkiye to Brazil worked from the facility at the newly built Bharat Mandapam -- the summit's venue

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Photo: Bloomberg

Press Trust of India New Delhi

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For many journalists from across the world who were here to cover the G20 Summit, sharing working space at the International Media Centre from September 8-10 made them experience the spirt of "one family".
On these three days, scribes and camerapersons from Italy to Singapore and Turkiye to Brazil worked from the facility at the newly built Bharat Mandapam -- the summit's venue.
In between work, they chatted over cups of coffee and Indian meals, and also learned about cultures of different countries from each other.
"It's interesting here to see that journalists who come from different countries and different cultures work in a similar way," Michael Hoefele, who works with German news agency dts, said on September 10.
The International Media Centre, a temporary working space, was spread over two floors in Hall No. 5 of the sprawling Bharat Mandapam complex.
G20 logos were splashed across huge decorative panels put up in the hall on the theme of 'Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam' -- 'One Earth. One Family. One Future'.

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On September 9, on the ground floor of the hall, in a corner, a TV journalist from Turkiye was doing a live broadcast while, near her desk, a German photographer was busy filing photos after the press conference of German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.
On the second day of the summit, an Indian TV journalist in a saree interacted with a delegate while a reporter from Italy, sitting at a terminal close by, filed stories on a laptop.
"We all have been working here for the last three days, from pre-summit briefing on September 8 to the main summit on September 9 and the closure of the event today. What I liked about the working space was that it has no walls to segment the space. A person sitting on one corner can see the person sitting at the other end," TV journalist from Istanbul, Asli Bilger Kutludag, said on September 10.
It has been very tiring but a different experience of India, she said.
The theme of G20 was depicted in the design of the working space too, with working zones linearly divided into segments named after Indian rivers -- Ganga, Yamuna, Brahmaputra, Krishna and Godavari on the ground floor and Narmada, Indus and Kaveri on the first floor.
Rooms were named after mountain ranges such as Vindhya and Niligiri on the ground floor while the main briefing room on the first floor bears the name Himalaya.
It is fitting that these segments have been named after India's rivers, some of which which meet each other at a confluence, said a Delhi-based journalist covering the G20 Summit.
Journalists from Italy, the US, Singapore and many other countries echoed similar sentiments.
Many of the hospitality staff who served them for those three days, felt a similar vibe.
"At one table is a journalist from say Brazil, while sitting at another desk is a reporter from Germany. They are all doing the same thing, even though they are from a different cultural and nationality. It was like a 'one big global family' for the last three days. Truly 'Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam'," a staffer said on the condition of anonymity.
The G20 Summit hosted at the Bharat Mandapam ended on September 10.
The leaders on September 9 had adopted the New Delhi Declaration, and the next day, the ceremonial gavel was handed over to Brazil by India, amid cheers from Brazilian journalists.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sep 19 2023 | 7:09 PM IST

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