tv Life Begins At 100 Al Jazeera October 4, 2019 4:00am-5:00am +03
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things and went to my friend's house to stay redmond's difficult situation is not new nor unique i did land began protesting 5 years ago during the umbrella movement he served jail time for his actions back then now 25 he's the chairman of a pro-democracy political party but still has a tense relationship with his father who used to work for the police department i thing it's a fairy personally for different people they have. different ways to face it so. i'm trying to. and the. conversation. the conflicts and some. of them me say. directly face parents people who support the hong kong government employees are referred to as blue and those who support the
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protest movement are identified as. is most of this internal family tension are between blue and yellow members there's also yellow on yellow tension. is part of a volunteer group that councils protestors she spoke with a mother and a son who both support the protesters the mother believes in the movement but does not want her son facing danger on the streets the son says he's doing it for the next generation. he really doesn't want his young. like worry about what. would be rare. for a 20 year old redwings future he hopes that he can find common ground with his parents he just returned home after being gone for a month. maybe one day i can find a different approach to try and change their point of view. but in the meantime
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he'll continue to go out to the streets and protest he's just not going to talk about it at home he's got hardly al-jazeera hong kong still to come on al-jazeera 4 people are killed during a knife attack at the central police headquarters in paris. and u.k. prime minister boris johnson hangs hope on his brakes and plan it would be accepted by the e.u. . hello there are very unsettled picture across much of europe even the sunshine across the south is being steadily squeezed out by this a line of cloud with snow showers and some thunderstorms and in fact for the last day really if at some very dark skies across some parts of europe this is in hungary to the southwest you can see these very threatening clouds bringing of course some rain and thunderstorms go through friday that system bringing those
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right in from storms moving fairly swiftly pushing as you can see eastwards on 2 western sections of the black sea down across into the southeast of europe and then behind that we've got this slice of fairly nice dry and sunny weather 21 celsius in rome on friday higher what we also have on friday is the remnants of what was hurricane lorenzo this is working its way across the u.k. been quite quickly pushing on into lake countries france and eventually pushing on into central areas into germany and then on saturday we've got a fairly much of the northwest of europe there's another system just doing its best to push in from the west so again some fairly heavy rain is pushing it with that but nice across the southwest 27 degrees into madrid and also a slightly warmer day in rome with a high of 24 but that rain as you see across the southeast pushing cross into western turkey so here is where we could see the rain the start of the weekend.
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2 planes from studio 50 in checked no hotel mr. park it is possible to fully clean the premises all forensic evidence but what you then leave is evidence that you have fully cleaned our mystery wanted to give evidence of stuff to speaking about the old me for even the so be covered up with just a. matter in a saudi consulate on al-jazeera. i don't enter my top stories when i was there a us president or trump as openly called on ukraine and china to investigate his
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political rival and former vice president joe biden democrats say it's a fundamental breach of his oath of office and in dangers of national security. iraq's prime minister is calling for calm after 3 days of anti-government protests which left at least 31 people dead earlier security forces opened fire and thousands of demonstrators who defied a curfew in the capital baghdad. and hong kong's leader carol lam is expected to enact an emergency law that would allow authorities to ban face mosques and runways this as an 18 year old student shot and injured by police during a protest has been charged with rioting and assaulting 2 officers. jarius president mohamed do biharis on a 3 day visit to south africa following attacks on nigerians and other foreign owned businesses there last month as one of our big models put a major strain on relations between africa's 2 largest economies i mean the miller has more from pretoria. it's the 1st visit to south africa by
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a nigerian head of state in 6 years. but the pomp and ceremony for their arrival of muhammadu buhari in pretoria maust underlying tensions following last month's attacks in johannesburg on foreign as of various nationalities including nigerians the south african government condemned the attacks and dispatched envoys to mend relations with countries whose citizens were attacked we have expressed deep regret at the events of the past few weeks that many festivals themselves through attacks directed at foreign national. condemnation or or form. and violence remains very very. some africans who carried out the attacks blamed foreigners for taking their jobs being a drain on the poorly performing economy and drug dealing after nigerians were attacked
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$600.00 of them took up the government offer of a free flight home some businesses owned by south africans in nigeria suffered retaliate she attacks both governments say they should never happen again we have very good who are. concrete measures to prevent the ego quota of the people. in the future both governments a significant attention will be paid to the safety of citizens in each other's countries 64 percent of south africa's trade in west africa comes from nigeria and many south african businesses they suffered attacks in response to the xenophobic violence at home or those trade links so important to both the presidents want to ensure that their country's relations stay strong while here at the union buildings officials have managed to quell diplomatic tensions it's not certain if the same
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has been done amongst those affected by the violence for me tim miller al-jazeera pretoria south africa 4 people have been killed in a knife attack at the paris police headquarters several others were wounded when a police employee stabbed a number of his colleagues before being shot dead it's believed the attacker was a 45 year old i.t. assistant and the police intelligence unit police are still investigating a motive for the attack the french president and mayor mike horne prime minister it will feel a bit of both visited the scene in central paris and partner has the latest from that. well speaking after the attack the paris prosecutor gave more details about the attack ysaye it was a 45 year old man who'd worked in police administration for 20 years in fact i've been based in the paris police headquarters this huge building in the center of paris very close to not treat them the paris prosecutor said that a criminal investigation is now been opened into the event to find out exactly what
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the attackers motivations world now in terms of what we know so far it was about 1 o'clock when the attacker lunged at fellow police officers inside the paris headquarters he had a ceramic knife so it was a knife that would not have been detected by the metal detectors we also understand that a police officer that had been nearby witnessing the scene opened fire and killed the attacker or the french president a man or mark rohr as well as the french prime minister and interior minister were at the scene the interior minister gave his condolences to the the victims' families he said that this shows what a difficult job the police have to do and it has to be said this comes just one day after thousands of police officers marched across paris to protest against what they say are increasingly stressful conditions and also against what they say is increasing police violence but it has to be said that a few of them would have expected an attack to come from within their ranks.
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province's the european union is looking to impose retaliatory tariffs as the u.s. plans new duties or a wide range of the blocks products the world trade organization gave the go ahead for washington to impose 7 and a half $1000000000.00 of tariffs on e.u. goods over illegal state subsidies to aircraft manufacturer air bus the u.s. is planning to tax goods from between 10 to 25 percent including scott french wine and italian cheese a similar case brought by the e.u. against the u.s. of a state's abilities to aircraft manufacturer boeing is due to be ruled on in 9 months time. britain's prime minister johnson is hoping his new set of proposals will m block stalled brecht negotiations thank you to new regulatory zone in northern ireland to replace the backstop arrangement in the existing withdrawal bill but it hasn't gone down well with some senior european parliament figures who say they won't support it to our reports one. if it is going to fail to bring
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a morning meeting of the cabinet boris johnson told ministers he would defend his new brakes of proposals in parliament with glutinous and molly and it's typical johnson language meaning he'd be sirup the sweet he very much mr proved to be a prime minister and his proposals could hardly have seemed removed reasonable this government's objective has always been to leave with a deal and these constructive and reasonable proposals show our seriousness of purpose of alternative a range but the prime minister's proposals while welcomed by former skeptics on his own side have not gone down well with the opposition plan to have even the remotest customs checks on the island of ireland while northern ireland alone retains elements of the e.u. single market has been shot down as not credible and designed to fail if he doesn't get a deal at the october council summit will he abide by the laws. of this country
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the emir withdrawal number 2 act and request an extension to avoid a disastrous no deal that option does not come command itself to me it would incur another 1000000000 pounds a month there are going to do whatever there are in this divided house of commons now 2 opposing forces on the one hand a force of will willing a new brakes feeling to be willing and to this breaks it crisis and on the other hand a force of resistance those who simply don't trust boris johnson's motives and who will do what ever they can to prevent and no deal breaks it none of which points to an easy majority for a deal in the house of commons we should turn these little incentive for e.u. leaders who will need to make their own compromises but our objective is very clear we don't want to see any customs posts between north and south nor do we want to see any tariffs are restrictions on trade and north and south and they were all
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about list in the 1900 s. we don't want to go back to that the majority of people in the north don't the majority of people in the republic of ireland don't but if we're going to be in 2 different customs unions i think that creates a real difficulty this going to be very hard to reconcile separately european commission president john paul has called the plan problematic senior european parliament figures say they won't support it boris johnson will have to use his most glutinous emoluments when he had told fans expect a donor tour of e.u. capitals later this week jonah hill al-jazeera london 2 years are vegas shootings the family is and loved ones of the victims and reached a $735000000.00 settlement with the hotel that housed the gunman 58 people were killed in the deadliest mass shooting in u.s. history when the gunman opened fire from a 2nd set just 32nd floor of the mandalay bay before turning his weapon on himself
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. palestine is celebrating its 6th annual film festival and this year's focus is on the empowerment of women our stance in amman days showcases the challenges and dangers faced by those living in gaza and the occupied west bank the day for him was at the festival premiere in ramallah. this is one of the main cultural events that has to do with the movie industry in palestine it promotes many work of palestinian independent movie directors as well as introduce international films to the palestinian audience the week long event attracts a lot of media attention and wants to help bring more people to cinemas and cinemas to people who don't have movie theaters aiming to hurt the movie industry especially as it faces financial challenges these obstacles such as the military checkpoints there the war live the permit regime all these fragmentation system imposed by the israeli army impacts heavily on the palestinian film move producers
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and filmmakers and teams the opening film it must be have been by palestinian director at least the man it's palestine's nomination to the best international film award at the oscars. you know the spin that the father started going to is going to be awarding of rights or with a little bit of a doubt. because the fee for a prize and most of them are about. a team of divers are descending into the unknown off the coast of south america the unique expedition is charting the recently discovered amazon reef it cloggs joined them off the coast of french briana. here on the northeastern edge of south america lies an outpost of france where in the cooler tropical evenings they relax as they might do in paris or not but this is cayenne in french guyana and the launch point of a unique expedition to explore and dive a whole new world we jump on the expedition rib and head out to sea the ship with
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the joint is lying 20 kilometers off shore the esperanza is one of greenpeace's campaign vessels and right now a dive ship and a flotilla poetry combined. so the amazon river and the amazon mouth is here the amazon reef presence was 1st revealed. here's a girl off the coast of brazil here with her 1st greenpeace expedition in the area and a 2nd when this expedition in the area last year identified the reef presence also into fresh rianna watchers we head off to find it no one has died the seas before this expedition almost immediately were accompanied at the bow by a school of dolphins just joining for the ride these waters brimming full of life. a sign a device they call the fish is launched and scans the sea bed it images anxiously observed on deck we scanning the bottom of the ocean between 81 and one in 20 meter
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to find if there is a rock star if this expedition is not alone with an interest in what lies below now 500 kilometers in that direction lies the melt of the amazon and the brazilian waters where it's estimated up to 14000000000 barrels of oil like and companies like b.p. and the brazilian government for that matter they want to get at it and the fear is that should there be an oil spill the great outpouring of the amazon river which is the world's largest. spill in this direction destroying a pristine ecosystem is give much more argument to the global call for marine conserve asian and creating my. but the act of arias this is one of the kind of player with 0 we need to protect in the world because if you have economic species you have the rubble it causes them so that's a way to call up the global leaders for marine protection. meanwhile the sane all team have found a section of reef suitable for diving. you can see something here all we've got up
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to 67 metres high reef on the bottom so that's really some interesting some interesting i have to do and died to. save time to prepare the dive for an early morning mission into the deep. with a new day will bring. al-jazeera off the coast of french guyana. and a reminder you can catch up any time on our website the address that is al-jazeera dot com watch us live where they are in shock on. the one of the top stories on i was there u.s. president donald trump has openly called on ukraine and china to investigate his political rival and former vice president joe biden democrats say it's a fundamental breach of his oath of office a similar request made during a phone call with ukraine's president in july as already triggered an impeachment inquiry in congress former u.s.
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special envoy to ukraine kurt volker as started his testimony in 3 committees as part of that inquiry. they should investigate because that is a property but really for all these companies if you look at it by the way likewise china started. it goes what happened. is just about as bad as what happened with. what you write so i would say that residents of this. if it were me i would recommend that they start at investigation by nobody has any doubt that they were. iraq's prime minister is calling for calm off to 3 days of and to government protests which have left at least 31 people dead security forces are planning to demonstrate is who defied a curfew in the capital baghdad the protests began over unemployment and poor services
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but it escalated into calls for a change of government. home calls that lead to carry lamb is expected to enact an emergency law that would allow authorities to band face masks at rallies pro-democracy protesters where the mosques to conceal their identities and shield themselves from tear gas will hold a special executive council meeting on friday to discuss the ban and all the tough measures meanwhile an 18 year old student shot and injured by police during a protest has been charged with rioting and assaulting 2 offices clojure is president obama do bihari is on a 3 day visit to south africa pouring attacks on nigerians and although foreign aid business is there last month bihari has been meeting his south african counterpart cyril run the pose a to discuss the issue which put a major strain on relations between africa's $2.00 just economies there's the headlines coming up next a lot of there it's the stream to stay with us if you can. i
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am for me ok and this is the stream today how in new zealand's indigenous filmmakers di colonizing cinema we will introduce you to a group of kiwis you are having a big impact on the silver screen you can tweet us at a.j. stream or leave your comments in a live chat and you too could be in the street. new zealand is fast becoming the go to location for hollywood providing
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a beautiful backdrop for brought bastar off the blockbuster but beyond the cinematic vistas the country is home to robust group of indigenous filmmakers actors and produces this week they're among a group of industry leaders meeting to discuss ways that they can tell their own stories. is that. welcome to the power of inclusion it's a 2 day summit being held here and auckland new zealand that's designed to ensure that diverse and inclusive spaces are the norm when it comes to the film and t.v. industry more than 700 people are gathered to discuss just that and one of the heavyweights doing the work to lane jones is the president of director. film collective or a it's a distribution and arts advocacy organization based in los angeles she's earned film credits that include the oscar nominated selma and the 4 time emmy winner and oscar nominated documentary 13 or a recently acquired an acclaimed new zealand doc we'll hear from the director about
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film in just a moment but 1st here's what to lane had to say about why diversity in this industry is so important you know when we started the company when we started the mission we knew what we wanted to do was to amplify people of color and women and so when you start from the very beginning you know with that mindset and with that direction it just becomes a part of what you do and it's what we do every single day how do we ensure diversity and inclusion are more than just buzz words to name says listen to diverse voices. and we get every day just that joining us from oakland to discuss this a free meter he's the filmmaker of the documentary marotta how mom de color nice the screen he's mother murat's anita was a notable indigenous filmmaker in new zealand at just rachel house. of glamour tala in the disney animated film she also helped create the maoi language question of the film and carrie was kiya she is
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a producer at the brains behind the production company brown sugar apple everybody every morning great to see you again i am really curious about how you see the new zealand film industry right now it seems to be surviving carry you stop how would you describe it. and you know i think it is thriving and i think that's why we have a lot of international productions i think it's really important to continue to support the local productions particularly the voices and under represented voices the voices of women and the voices of people of color and i think i hope that there's much more of a move towards that after this the summit is a lot more action to do that so that these stories can be told i think new zealand film industry and i'm not sure how would you describe. i would say i mean there's almost like a been diagram going on the island film industry that supplies the world with all
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these big budget hollywood production and we've got new zealand going this 3 that's made for new zealand audiences the one between the problems reach across both bases so much carrying on let me remind audiences they may not even know that means england was the basis for some of these movies productions so let me take it to the movies via i mean zealand these were made in the.
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rachel such a stunning location what an amazing place to make films you have been in some major major films i am wondering as an actress in new zealand is this the best time ever . here i mean we. were. on on all of these here. was the one we are still struggling. yeah you know. it was a. year which is about. the cry of every minority group around the wealth to be included and you laid some
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strides and you were in a production of disney production in disney have been criticised for many many years about how they have treated minorities and how they have of the and so many criticisms of kind of begin to get into them but you paid a grandma. and this fairy definitely had a polynesian touch to it and you helped them do it even better that's for a little clip of your vocal work have a look. when i die. i'm going to come back because why not. sure i chose the wrong time. why are you acting weird i'm livin it crazy lady that's my job if there's something you want to just tell me. something you want to tell me is this something you want to hear. a good phrase for today's conversation rachael
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how do you start how did you start the colonizing the cinema i can see aspects of that already in that disney film and all 3 of you are doing that right now with your work. yeah i mean look we just have to be a bowl and we've got a right no room and we have to challenge. the funding bodies about you know funding would think rich and find that your next boy says there are about us. it's all we can do at this stage. it's not happening as much i will say they and i think they need a film commission of very willing to engage in conversations with us about out on and i want to say as much as we do i think. that outlook is is produced and directed and written by our let's be very specific downside with that disney film
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ana. went out into the local community and said we are going to make a number of this and we going to voice it with to show indigenous voices tell us how it. well you know it was an idea that hike away. and chose the one family had very early on you know kind of young children and and it was that one was a huge hit without people was a huge hit with i want to major in people. the visibility. because of it you know it was significant and i think you know i do know that. that has made it a lot of criticism but really if you look at the body of work coming out now it's very inclusive the you know the giant and we have thing these
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cultures and and faith is you know is that that we we don't often say and in such a major way so anyway but. it hadn't met the impact it was criticized for nationally and then when it came out it was embraced because there was that recognition oh ok or beth out. and rachel talking carrie is not and i think it's not entirely what's behind that knowledge to try and i just completely agree with right jill i think that was wonderful 'd and it was it was great to see ourselves on screen and i think great to see us in the mainstream and to hear you know for right jill to be voicing grandma that you know she is like an icon here so that was that was wonderful and also the work that you know tiger and chelsea judge to have it into their mouth and for that to be available for. young new
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zealanders particularly the maori language all of that's wonderful and that is to be celebrated we should we should celebrate we should celebrate that i was listening to the maoists i thought last night and sort of absent from the force i could jump. all right joe let me just share this with you. i love this tweet to have ava du vernay give you some credit and careless beautiful thing i haven't even i says this man made a beautiful talk about his mother the legendary maui filmmaker but out and lisa she believes in decriminalizing movie screens here i'm just going to scroll down to you looking very dapper here you tell a story about your mom that is more than just a personal family story it's a story about a determined indigenous filmmaker who was the 1st of her kind shaking up the film industry why did you feel that this was such an important story to tell you know
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a lot of the issues and the barriers that she was coming up against 30 years ago when she was 1st starting her career and i think resonate a lot today a lot of my mom's early work was about money land protests money rights protests and you just need to look at what's going on in places like hawaii with the protests that mona care at the time was making the film that the quota pipeline protests were going on and so there was this wave of activism amongst indigenous people and that was something that my mom was already working on quite a few decades ago and that those situations really interested me because it was like things have definitely changed and positive ways across the board in many many ways but there i look laces and wedge we're still fighting fight and we're still doing the same things that we're still going on you know to look for decades now and that was one of the big motivating factors for me in actually sharing my mom's story but the rest of the world let me just show a little clip here and this is
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a clip from the making of the trailer of. the film which is called marotta how mom decolonized the screening. what you see when you look at an archival film a really rich and taking place. is the grandmother indigenous and it was about changing history changing the way native people people were perceived by the rest of the world and is that contrast with the way you feel. very much so i don't think you regard me as agree. we share this tweet with you jason says bill cinematic bridges it was a mentor to many because if we can think of indigenous cinema in an international
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sense today there are stories that she told about new zealand that people were shocked that were happening in new zealand stories of racism stories of indigenous communities being left out and being seen as as less than the rest of the community or less than people who had paid less than. those stories do you feel that they're still relevant today. oh absolutely i mean you know those stories didn't go down too well here in new zealand during my mother's time because they were quite confronting and people didn't you know a lot of people want cinema to be an escape but she was more interested in the realism of the situation facing money in society so the way that she was able to continue her career in the way that kind of it was actually in a strange way almost benefited was that she took a stories of the sea and she found that there were many people like indigenous
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communities around the world who were facing similar issues and she found allies and contemporaries in places like an aboriginal communities in this trailer indigenous communities in canada and hawaii or lead the world and so she was able to link these people together and form a bit of a network of indigenous filmmakers around the world so that there was content that could be shared and a like a festival circuit that could be shared where we could actually watch and relate to each other struggles and that level of empathy and then feeling that you're not alone in the world that these issues of colonisation you need to you i think is really important and really powerful to help support people who can sometimes be in some pretty dark places because of the results of things like on my station i am just not have a picture have you reckon you have your own production company you're an actress it's almost as if you felt if we're going to tell our stories we're going to have
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to tour after south and we need to be in charge we've talked about how amazing the new zealand film c.m.'s but who is behind the camera we're making the films perhaps affront to the camera reference and stories from a business community but who is controlling his palace and i think perhaps what you want to include was more about. yeah i mean i'm really passionate about who who is who is in the key creative roles and who's telling the stories and i actually think that to colonizing the screen also starts with to colonizing the structures that we're that in which we get to tell those stories you know you're still asking indigenous people to look into systems of funding that are built on colonize ation and so that doesn't necessarily work for everyone and the structure and model that we were with with the writer directors of what even the writer directors of by definitely challenges that system and see as well that might not necessarily be how we want to make we're and i think that has to be embraced and i think you know he
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the right talked about that yesterday as well so karen just a slowing down because everybody has all of those 3 people that you mentioned and the 2 films that you mentioned as well the rest of us have had to not worry as a film that vi is a film that. is a film but it's a collaborative film and it starts at 10 am and it talks about the death of a child but from different perspectives of different women and it has vignettes of different stories i should be telling your story because at the point the point of this discussion but i want to show a little clip so people know what we're talking about let's have a look at why. i'm struggling. and.
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you know what i thought i was. so careful this is an example in the cinema. but what if that the original director was going to be a mallet and then what yeah that's right yeah well i'm it where he was going to be . that sort of how we created but as we as we started to talk more about it we at we really understood that he shouldn't be telling that story and he shouldn't be having that hour and we wanted to give it over to maadi female writers and directors and we wanted to have 8 in the room we actually worked with 9 writer directors all together and it was really important to do that and i think that that is also part of colonizing is handing over the power. to that those people can tell
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their stories and i can control what what it is that we're all seeing and listening to and experiencing on screen i think this is something that you'll. never feel documentary even in the title what does it mean on a practical level to colonize the cinema. i think in a very practical level i mean you know you go back to my mother's time people didn't even know what the mahdi was so a lot of her work was explaining the issues explaining the things that we face now in subsequent generations of the work of directors like take away to see who are directing films like for in georgia rabbit and having massive international success so i think that is part of the decolonized nation process there's also another aspect of it and i think that is you know for many minority in this industry you're a contract you go from job to job and it's different to be
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a contract then it is to own your own production company or to have the resources and infrastructure to then be able to handle a bigger budget production and so instead of us being employees i think one of the issues attractive to have decolonization is actually being able to form our production companies that uphold money values but also have the infrastructure needed to make a big budget productions let me bring in christopher retaught just a couple of allopaths tell us about part of his story from his long have a look. at harmonix. was a filmmaker on the feature we. shot. with the director the ronson and most of the actors. this is the 1st time we were able to tell our own story without someone telling it for us. he is an extraordinary still
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having 1st your mom was the 1st or so many different filmmaker 1st mom with a ton of kids that she was taking around the world making films 1st maoi female feel that all of these 1st for many decades ago we're still seeing that do you feel that new zealand right now in the indigenous from community are they beginning to be come just every day filmmakers and there's less of the 1st still happening or system a big barrier that you're just trying to forge through. that money. i mean it's actually comes down to simple representation but in the camera there's only been 3 modey women and new zealand have it directed a feature length project wow that's from 1970 2 'd to today 3 well that's it i think you can probably count the number of molly the richt is who have directed a peach willing film on both of my hand his his the one we should look up his work
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straight away with tyco gets a lot of mentions because like is that what he says on his on saw what else is a boy what with him with your mom so tight tyke is no melt off who else should we look up and spoil the times as well i mean us i mean. i'm going back and he's almost the older generation but at least some of holies films i've ridden with famous ones will laureus was one of his films he had a bit of success in hollywood as well. tatic because he is an amazing film director but i do actually want to give a shout out to a film that's going to be coming out soon and that is the work of painfully gardner and brian graysmith they will be the next modern woman to the rick to feature here in new zealand and it's been almost 30 years since the last one was made so there's a 2 at the code direction they're making a film called cousins that the film should definitely support and one of the interesting things is despite that lack of representation if you look at the top 10
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highest grossing films in new zealand history. of them are either made by madi directors or are adaptations of money stories. that is just west of polis just a question that because people will support indigenous filmmakers you just have to give them the access are you talking about access this is important justin is a new zealand filmmaker he is a minority i'm trying to get ringback into the film some instant fickel he explains why i have a lot. well the newseum is making progress in some areas and has to be a much greater commitment to fund and support to say we're here to tell stories i had to start my own agency activate to tell stories that mattered to me in my community it's been an uphill battle it's been an accessible that i would want from any other aspiring disabled filmmakers i think as a community to sables people are demanding more we deserve better than to be reduced to tokenism on screen we've learned from the disability rights movement
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that we need to say we're people to be leaders in telling our own stories we need more disabled directors more disabled writers more disabled producers in the film industry nothing about us without us. that phrase again so says so important to me i feel that this is what you've been doing what advice would you give to of a new zealand indigenous film in a film about breaking through that barrier a living or what telling the stories well i think it's really important to talk about it so i mean the the summit inclusion you know includes power of inclusion summit is a good stat but people have to not be a. it has to be confirmed by the people who have the power that when people start to talk about that when they start to challenge that that doesn't mean that they're going to be blacklisted it doesn't mean that they're not going to get a job and i think that fear exists and it shouldn't exist we should be able to challenge one another and speak that is what will help us to do better rachael of
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final was in college what with. colleagues out there in the industry and trying to do what your doing. i had to be right be right and get on with it. we you know we we need to come together a lot more i think and every discussion yeah and you know the i think there is going to have been used before about what why is that we want. marty to reach the trust issue with. producers but that he non-indigenous so we just need to really challenge challenge why they. make their own way yeah you know what if we get. here right away yeah i hear it thank you so much safety right show kerry people thing watching you know what they've been quoting it and also talking about you in this conversation. says it's amazing seeing what
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staring we're working to do something resoundingly the movie industry here in nigeria inspiring people around the halls thank you guests thank you for watching see you next. on the streets of greece anti immigrant violence is on the rise you have to go from other potential and this and that brought. us is something and increasingly migrant farm workers are victims a vicious beatings. is helping the pakistani community to find
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a voice the stories we don't often hear told by the people who live them undocumented and under attack this is 0 on al-jazeera when the news breaks you know i came here to vote in order to get someone who can get this country out of the crisis when people need to be cut. truck to live a little cross this border area without that haitian al-jazeera has teams on the ground for the last few months these come back on. the streets of hong kong because back to put lulu documentaries and lighting on air and online. incarcerated. in russia's toughest prisons stripped off their liberties for an unexpected creative opportunity. just. missing being called just like no other offers a chance of redemption and hope for the talented few. visiting lives inside
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and out a tale of fingers and murderers on al-jazeera. al-jazeera the sisters opportunity to understand slain a very the french way where there is nothing happens and we don't leave the. how do i learned in london the top stories on our jazeera u.s. president don't trump as openly called on ukraine and china to investigate his democratic election rival and former vice president joe biden new to us democrats say the president has breached his oath of office by asking for leaders to prove his political opponents a similar request made during a phone call with ukraine's president in july is already triggered an impeachment inquiry in congress former u.s.
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special envoy to ukraine. started his testimony in 3 committees as part of that inquiry is the 1st key official to testify as investigations into trump's dealings with ukraine ramp up the white house correspondent can really help it has more well certainly there is a little bit of surprise that the president's comments one day after a very antagonistic press conference here at the white house the u.s. president was speaking before reporters in the white house south lawn before he departed to florida to talk about health care and he was asked very directly once again about this impeachment inquiry and the telephone call at the root of it this july 25th telephone call involving the ukrainian leader vladimir selenski now the u.s. president has maintained as he did again today that there was nothing wrong with this telephone call that was absolutely perfect but then he doubled down on the very thing that got him in trouble allegedly in the 1st place and that is using his presidential powers to potentially or the allegations are that he has once again
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tried to get dirt on a political rival former vice president joe biden. they should investigate because that is a company that still only formed all these companies that you look at and by the way likewise china has started to get to the bar it goes what happened to china is just about as bad as what happened with. with ukraine so i would say that president salutes. if it were me i would recommend that they start an investigation to devise nobody has any doubt that they were broken now joe biden has been speaking about all of this he maintains that numerous media outlets have investigated his son's connections to an energy company in the ukraine back when he was the vice president of the united states barack obama's
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administration he maintains that there was no evidence of any wrongdoing still the current vice president mike pence has weighed in on this controversy he says that it is worth looking into not only the actions of the former vice president joe biden was for but also his son hunter biden and there's also believe this investigation into donald trump's conduct according to mike pence the current vice president he believes that that should end iraq's prime minister is calling for calm after 3 days of anti-government protests which left at least $31.00 people dead security forces opened fire on thousands of demonstrators who defied a kind of human capital baghdad purchase began new unemployment and poor services domesticated into calls for a change of government and that is one of the worst security challenges in his. home calls need to carry lamb is expected to enact an emergency law that would allow sorties to band face mosques and rallies. pro-democracy protesters where the
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masks to conceal their identities and shield themselves from tear gas line will hold a special executive council meeting on friday to discuss the ban and other tough measures on the colonial era emergency law meanwhile an 18 year old student shot and injured by police during a protest has been charged with rioting and assaulting 2 offices. jarius president mohamed 2 hari's on a 3 day visit to south africa following attacks on nigerians and other foreign owned businesses that last month who has been meeting his south african counterpart syria ramaphosa to discuss the issue which put a major strain on relations between africa's 2 largest economies nigerian government through 600 citizens home following the attacks in johannesburg in september which left 12 people dead. those are the headlines to stay with us. in a saudi consulate is coming up next more news for you after that thanks for watching by for.
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the body. with it but back then. it is such official animal rights as a right. we're. back again are trying to find out what. saudi arabia for farmers are to turn off democracy. democracy show cheers from up. some form of closure foreign minister saying this was all a terrible and the execution of jamal khashoggi your frequent critic of the shots are the regime and the side of the saudi consulate. trying to.
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own world here telling of josh if she was a premeditated foreigner monday the 1st of october 28th. nothing seemed out of the ordinary in the belgrade forest in the northwest of the took a city of istanbul. it was the start of the week so there were only a few visitors. just before sunset surveillance cameras picked up a car belonging to the consulate of saudi arabia in istanbul it passed through a security gate before moving through the forest it would later emerge in the turkish outs about newspaper that it was carrying the saudi military attache. xeni what took his intelligence would call a surveillance mission. according to. elma xeni had returned to his stumble from jeddah that day with a deadly plan. to eliminate the saudi journalist jimbo showed.
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a little you know smooth i don't know we i don't want to believe you read any more now. whatever that was on the 21st of june 27th teen mohammed bin selma was made crown prince of saudi arabia. 2 weeks later a major diplomatic crisis blew up in the gulf between saudi arabia and 3 of its allies and qatar. also that june another writer close to be in selma on advised either to take part in the campaign against qatar or to leave the country. chose to leave saudi arabia he flew from jeddah via london to the united states. the pressure increased i believe him to 14 or to 15 when
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he was banned from writing minster of information decided to publish the letter from writing and i think you found the very very insulting you should remember the germans banned from tweeting and writing articles why didn't he. because he's done a lot of speaking of. we've met the governor and. the concept of the cross and the freedom of conciliation and we did work. for i think 100 someone is doing. the right things by introducing version 213 no he just has to do it right i showed he had studied journalism at indiana state university in the early eighty's and worked for the saudi diplomat took feisal while he was ambassador to the us. i show she's for children also had us nationality isn't this some.
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but it's the election got the bill for each day. all those number targets you know this is the arctic. all of the lower half of the are you see there are. crabby mixture us live without this formulation what's to. do isn't very happy he was worried he one time told me his 2 sons complained to him that they are held hostage because of him they couldn't travel since they were both bankers and their work requires them to travel and they could not leave the kingdom their passports were confiscated and they were blaming him and that really caused lots of guilt. he told me he felt guilty that he is causing the. stress and suffering. in aug 27th teen ashaji tweeted for the 1st time from his self exile in the us i
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returned to writing and tweeting grateful to his highness the minister of information for his kind efforts gratitude and loyalty to the royal crown prince no free pain is broken and no tweet is silence under his reign. the tweet seemed confusing and contradictory and posed questions about his relationship with his native country. the saudi authorities had banned him from writing in a phone call from an adviser to the royal court so doubt qahtani. later referred to this ban in a b.b.c. interview shouted be a little. bit earlier and much call your bluff will be a real hard if you will live any longer be. in september 27th teen a show she started writing for the washington post. this enabled him to communicate
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with a far wider audience and sphere of influence. for the saudis i think this was the scariest thing the guy writes for a paper that's already all over the world that are driven by this is a makers in the us. some i'm from a missing mind enough to fill out a family coffee then them for bennies me i think many men do a lot of the thought. that i am their mother wasn't almost becoming more and. by this time she wanted to legalize his status in the u.s. and in december 2017 was granted political asylum that offered him a degree of stability and he began to create a network between washington is down bull london and other world capitals khalid elsa fori took the producers of this program to his friend jamal's apartment in tysons corner virginia. they managed to contact a show she saw on the dollar but the call led nowhere.
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the phone. as we speak today there are intellectuals under notice jill no nobody will dare to speak and criticize. saudi intelligence was closely monitoring her show she and his movements and briefing the new crown prince and heir to the throne of the horn of the world. i mean. the saudis tried to tempt the journalist to return a source close to her show she said that the adviser to the roll call. contacted him twice by phone. he allegedly said that mohammed bin salmond trusted her.
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