“All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights”
The Human Rights Network of Aotearoa is proud to present the 4th Annual New Zealand Human Rights Film Festival – a
cinematic celebration of extraordinary people striving for success in the most difficult conditions.
2008 is a particularly special year for the Human Rights movement as it’s the 60th Anniversary of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights. The films featured in this Festival not only celebrate how far we’ve come since the
signing, but also highlight where work is still needed for the promise of the First Article – that All human beings are
born free and equal – to be truly realised.
This year’s programme features the following films that may be of particular interest to you:
THE DICTATOR HUNTER – a film by Dutch director Klaartje Quirjins
“If you kill one person, you go to jail. If you kill 40 people, they put you in an insane asylum. But if you kill 40,000
people, you get a comfortable exile with a bank account in another country, and that’s what we want to change here,”
says Reed Brody. He hunts dictators for a living as a lawyer for Human Rights Watch. For seven years, Brody has been
chasing one former dictator in particular: Hissene Habré, the former leader of Chad, who is charged with killing
thousands of his own countrymen in the 1980s. The Dictator Hunter shows what it takes for one man to break the cycle of
impunity.
FIGHTING THE SILENCE: SEXUAL VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN IN CONGO – a film by Dutch directors Ilse and Femke van Velzen
During the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s seven-year war, more then 80,000 women and girls were raped. “Fighting the
Silence” tells the story of ordinary women and men struggling to change their society: one that prefers to blame victims
rather than prosecute rapists. Survivors tell of the brutality they experienced. Husbands talk of the pressures that led
them to abandon their wives. A father explains why he has given up on his daughter’s future. Soldiers and policemen
share their views about why rape continues to flourish in the Congo, despite the war having officially ended four years
ago.
Human Rights Film Festival 2008
Wellington: 8-16 May | Paramount Theatre
Auckland: 15-23 May | Newmarket Rialto Cinema
Christchurch: 22-30 May | Regent Theatre
Dunedin: 29 May-6 June | Rialto Cinema
Please tell your friends, lovers, enemies, co-workers, family, students, and random strangers about this important and
unique Festival.
Why come along? Because…
1) After each screening a member of the Human Rights Community will speak about the film and encourage a discussion of
how it has affected you and what the consequences are, if any, for New Zealand society.
2) The Festival includes award-winning documentaries direct from international film festivals including: Toronto, San
Francisco, Jerusalem, IDFA Amsterdam, and Karlovy Vary (Czech Republic).
3) The featured films explore pressing Human Rights issues including: exploitation in Maquilapolis – City of Factories,
globalisation in Afghan Chronicles, genocide in The Dictator Hunter, exile in Western Sahara: Africa’s Last Colony, and
war in Children of the Nation.
But this not a Festival of doom and gloom!
Most of the documentaries focus on communities and individuals who are busy overcoming adversity, surviving against the
odds and moving towards an inclusive and fulfilling society.
“In many ways this film programme emphasises the point that human rights are universal and enduring. The concerns of
today are no different to those of 60 years ago, or those in 20 years time. The nature or essence of those rights will
remain the inherent dignity and worth of the person. Concerns over the environment, globalisation, fair trade,
accountability of political leaders, privatisation of utilities, and privacy dominate for now. However, the right to
freedom of expression, the right not to be discriminated against, the right to life, and the right to safe working
conditions have just as much cogency today as they did in 1948.”
Human Rights Film Festival Directors
For more information check out www.humanrightsfilmfest.net.nz or pick up a programme from your local library, café, or
the any participating cinema.
Please help spread the word by sending this e-mail to everyone in your address book/database
Thank you!
Boris van Beusekom & Carolyn Brown
Directors New Zealand Human Rights Film Festival
Human Rights Film Festival Aotearoa New Zealand
PO Box 24423, Manners St | Wellington | New Zealand
Ph +64 4 381 3430 | www.humanrightsfilmfest.net.nz
Other highlights of the 2008 Festival include:
A WALK TO BEAUTIFUL - The award winning feature-length documentary A Walk to Beautiful tells the stories of five
Ethiopian women who suffer from devastating childbirth injuries and embark on a journey to reclaim their lost dignity.
Rejected by their husbands and ostracised by their communities, these women are left to spend the rest of their lives in
loneliness and shame. They make the choice to take the long and arduous journey to the Addis Ababa Fistula Hospital in
search of a cure and a new life. The film has a New Zealand connection in that it features an interview with Dr
Catherine Hamlin who, along with her New Zealand born husband, helped set up and worked in the hospitals. Most recently
Dr Hamlin has been in New Zealand raising funds for their Hamlin Charitable Fistula Hospitals Trust.
A MINORITY REPORT: KOSOVO MINORITIES, EIGHT YEARS AFTER - In June 1999, following the end of the three-month long NATO
military campaign against Yugoslavia, the United Nations Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) was established. During the first
year of UNMIK, over 240,000 members of minorities – mostly Serbs, Roma and Gorani – fled Kosovo. Hundreds of those who
stayed, were killed, kidnapped or otherwise brutally persecuted for not belonging to the majority community. According
to United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), only around 15,000 Internally Displaced People (IDPs) returned
to Kosovo in 2007. Those who returned live in ghettoes dispersed through Kosovo. Threats, harassments and isolation are
part of the daily life of the returnees. Kosovo has gained its independence but for whom?
CHILDREN OF THE NATION
Set amongst the chaos of youth gang fighting in 2006 that has turned tens of thousands of East Timorese families into
IDPs, an inspired East Timorese teacher develops a vision for the children in her school. Sister Aurora Pires, along
with New Zealand teacher Anne Fisher, trains teachers to nurture their young students so they can heal wounds and break
the cycle of trauma to build a humanistic and truly democratic society.
MAQUILAPOLIS - CITY OF FACTORIES
After making television components all night, Carmen comes home to a shack she built out of recycled garage doors, in a
neighbourhood with no sewage lines or electricity. She suffers from kidney damage and lead poisoning from her years of
exposure to toxic chemicals. She earns six dollars a day. But Carmen is not a victim. She is a dynamic young woman, busy
making a life for herself and her children. In MAQUILAPOLIS, Carmen and her colleagues reach beyond the daily struggle
for survival to organise change: by taking a major television manufacturer to task for violating their labour rights.
NOW THE PEOPLE HAVE AWOKEN
Venezuela has been in Washington’s enemy list in recent years. It also sits atop the biggest oil reserves in the world
and claims to promote a new socialism. What makes Venezuela tick? Having survived a military coup in 2002, Venezuela’s
President Hugo Chavez is regularly depicted as the dictator squandering the wealth of the nation and repressing
democratic freedoms. Who else but Venezuela’s repeatedly elected dictator would publicly call the president of the US
“the devil”? New Zealanders Julia Capon and Ricardo Restrepo went to Venezuela to film the December 2006 elections and
the reaction if Chavez was re-elected, but found something better in the story of a people coming together to build a
new future.
OCCUPATION 101: VOICE OF THE SILENCED MAJORITY
A thought-provoking and powerful documentary film on the current and historical root causes of the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict. Unlike any other film ever produced on the conflict -- 'Occupation 101' presents a comprehensive analysis of
the facts and hidden truths surrounding the never ending controversy, and dispels many of its long-perceived myths and
misconceptions.
THE DICTATOR HUNTER
“If you kill one person, you go to jail. If you kill 40 people, they put you in an insane asylum. But if you kill 40,000
people, you get a comfortable exile with a bank account in another country, and that’s what we want to change here,”
says Reed Brody. He hunts dictators for a living as a lawyer for Human Rights Watch. For seven years, Brody has been
chasing one former dictator in particular: Hissene Habré, the former leader of Chad, who is charged with killing
thousands of his own countrymen in the 1980s. The Dictator Hunter shows what it takes for one man to break the cycle of
impunity.