Journalists received training on the conditions they may encounter in the field during war, disasters, and emergencies at the “28th Term War Journalism Training” organized by Anadolu Ajansı (AA), the Police Academy Presidency, and Turkish Cooperation and Coordination Agency (TİKA).
The training sessions, which include 9 AA journalists, and 15 foreign journalists from nine different countries—Djibouti, Tunisia, Senegal, Niger, Cameroon, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Gabon, the Republic of Guinea, and Chad—provide information on how journalists working in disasters such as war, fire, flood, and earthquake should act under difficult conditions, both theoretically and through practical applications.

During the first two days of the training, participants were briefed by expert instructors on “war theory and terminology,” “protection against disinformation,” “law of war,” “naval operations,” and “air operations,” and received first aid training.
On the third day of the training, journalists received training on “technology and information transmission security in extraordinary circumstances,” “African geopolitics,” and “media management and broadcasting principles in extraordinary circumstances” at the Police Academy's Anıttepe campus.

The training then continued with practical exercises at the Police Academy's Gölbaşı campus.
Here, participants were instructed on how to respond to interventions involving pressurized water, pepper spray, and smoke bombs. They were provided with information on social unrest, bulletproof equipment, and gas mask usage, and underwent simulation training to prepare them for such situations.