Foreign Correspondents' Club

Sylvain Krainik, avocat à la Cour et jour naliste ; Mme SOPHIA Dimonte.

It holds several speaking and social events each month, and conducts an annual Working Conditions Survey of its members.

When prominent international figures from the worlds of commerce, politics or entertainment visit Hong Kong, many choose to address the FCC's speaker lunches as the best means of reaching their desired audience - both directly and through media coverage of the events.

In 2002, the club launched a charity ball featuring major musical acts that attracts attendees from across Asia.

[6] The FCC in New Delhi has a long pedigree, having been founded in 1958 by correspondents covering the Indian Subcontinent from Tibet to Sri Lanka.

Most correspondents of international media outlets tend to cover not only India but also all neighboring countries, including Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Nepal, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka from a permanent base in New Delhi.

[7] The Jakarta Foreign Correspondents Club (JFCC) is a non-profit organization for international journalists in Indonesia.

The club offers a workroom facility, a library, a restaurant, a bar, and a steady stream of local and international speakers and panels.

The club organises regular briefings, debates and receptions with government officials, politicians, leading civil society figures, business leaders, analysts, academics and authors.

Associate members include journalists from the local media, foreign diplomats, government agency and trade office representatives, executives from the business community and non-government organisations.