The Old Pocklingtonian 2018-19 | Page 8

IN THE SPOTLIGHT HOW ASHLEY SHARED AFRICA’S STORIES WITH THE WORLD Reporting on the devastating 2014 Ebola epidemic in West Africa would test the most seasoned journalist, but for Ashley Hamer (99-06) it was a baptism of fire in an exhilarating freelance career. Ashley had been learning the ropes at Channel 4 News when she grabbed her camera, bought a one-way ticket and reported on the virus outbreak which shocked the world. She says: “I felt I was wasting my time in London when the gravity of the Ebola outbreak in West Africa was far greater than was being reported. It was early 2014 and fortunate timing for me, because I arrived in Sierra Leone when there were almost no other journalists around, and major news organisations were starting to realise this was a catastrophe. “I started with two assignments simultaneously – a self-shot TV documentary and a photo/print story for a website. I joined a small group of freelancers and we winged it, rushing around in the bush on the heels of the epidemic, absorbing the disaster it left as it tore through communities. Those are among the saddest scenes I have ever covered, and you do not leave unaffected by what you have seen.” Over the next four years, Ashley worked in East and West Africa and Afghanistan, providing articles, photography and radio and television interviews for the likes of Al Jazeera, IRIN News and The Independent, along with carrying out photographic assignments for NGOs and building up an impressive photographic portfolio. In 2016, she was part of a team of four freelancers shortlisted for an Amnesty International media award for a multimedia story from Sudan’s Blue Nile state. It was a world away from leafy Pocklington, where Ashley arrived as a boarder at Orchard House in 8 1999 after growing up in Mali, West Africa. Two years later her mother and younger brothers Sam (01-08) and Ed (02-09) arrived, and Ashley switched to being a day pupil. She received an art scholarship and spent as much time as she could in the Art and Design Centre, under the wings of teachers Pete Edwards and Clare Swann. She also loved her French lessons, taught by Patrick Dare. She says: “Art and French were by far my best subjects and these teachers knew that and pushed me to work harder. I thought I knew better than they did! We butted heads a little, but I’m grateful for their encouragement now.” Ashley was always determined hers was not going to be a conventional career. “I grew up with parents who have always been very interested in politics, culture, history, geography, travel and people, so I was fortunate to be born into the international system and with an awareness of the world and its wonder. I think this fuelled an innate curiosity and eventually an urge to witness world events and visit far-flung places,” she says. “I became fascinated with journalists’ accounts from the frontlines of conflict and political and social upheavals throughout history. I wanted to do what these wild foreign correspondents did, to experience for myself the turbulence of our times and communicate what I saw. There was no other profession I could imagine that would enable me to do this with such a valid purpose.” She took Spanish and French at Bristol University, to help her talk to people across the continents. “Languages are the most useful subjects a person