Globe and Mail wins in 11 of 21 categories at National Newspaper Awards
TORONTO — The Globe and Mail won 11 of the 21 categories at the National Newspaper Awards on Friday, and the newspaper’s Mark MacKinnon was named 2016 Journalist of the Year.
MacKinnon was chosen for his report on the Syrian teenagers who sparked the Syrian war, Britain’s referendum on the European Union, the attempted coup in Turkey, and the period of instability that is gripping the world.
A release from the National Newspaper Awards said the judges found MacKinnon “weaved a narrative that details the interdependence of world events today – in Europe, the United States, Russia, Turkey and the rest of the Muslim world. They called the result “an incredible piece of writing that combines context with storytelling and dogged reporting.”
The Toronto Star won two awards, and eight other news organizations — The Canadian Press, the Kingston Whig-Standard, the National Observer, the Winnipeg Free Press, La Presse, the Toronto Sun, the Calgary Herald/Calgary Sun, and Fort McMurray Today/Edmonton Journal/Edmonton Sun — won one each.


