Child Soldiers Documentary - Global
To produce the film, 5 location directors/camera operators from Australia, Hong Kong, and the USA equipped with lightweight digital cameras traveled to conflict zones across 4 continents. Organisers say that all of them faced considerable challenges and danger in their attempts to find and talk with child soldiers and those who recruit them. For example, over a period of 4 weeks, photojournalist Meredith Davenport worked to earn the trust of a group of children who had escaped the FARC, a former Colombian socialist army now operating as a rebel, dealing in cocaine, kidnapping, and extortion. In the film, these children describe - sometimes using very graphic words - how they have been used as terrorists, and the effect this has had on their lives. During filming, Davenport was held up at knifepoint by street kids in Bogota, but she managed to escape with her camera to continue filming.
In addition to using very particular, personal portraits, the documentary also repeats some stories to suggest a sense of cycle. That is, the documentary team are with former child soldiers after they've escaped, filming and talking to the children as they re-connect with family and community. However, the film then shows that, even when reunited, the children are not necessarily safe. They are already part of a cycle: after being kidnapped to be soldiers, they may escape to their villages, only to be kidnapped again and again. A child soldier in Myanmar portrayed in the film says, "I feel sorry. Why do I feel sorry? Because by the time I could go to school, I am already too old for the beginner's class. I can't dream of going to school any more because it is too late. I will stay in the army until I die."
The film was produced for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC), Oregon Public Broadcasting (OPB), and Radio Television Hong Kong (RTHK). First televised in Australia in 2002, the film was most recently screened across the United States on Home Box Office (HBO) in the autumn of 2003. Click here to read about the location directors and to read selected quotations from the film.
Producer Andrew Ogilvie established Electric Pictures, an independent production company, in 1992. Ogilvie says, "'Child Soldiers' is the most difficult project I have been responsible for. We were asking film crew to go to remote and very dangerous places, most often alone and with little backup if something went wrong..." Reflecting on the film, writer/director Alan Lindsay says, "I don't know if the film will make a difference to a child soldier's life. I sure hope it does - something has to challenge the apathy and greed that keeps kids in armies and rebel groups. There is no justification for using kids to fight wars and absolutely no justification for the inertia of the international community in addressing this abomination. There are far too many people in power prepared to waste the lives of children for political or economic advantage."
This film was winner of the 2003 Child Rights Award at Osnabrueck Independent Film Festival in Germany, winner of the 2002 ABU/CASBBA/UNICEF award for best programme about the child's rights produced in the Asia/Pacific region; and winner of the Silver World Medal in the 2002 New York Film Festival's National/International Affairs category and Bronze World Medal in the 2002 UNESCO Awards.
Comments
It is an excellent work on behalf of world peace and children. Given the fact my won family has been directly affected by child soldierin in Uganda, I can only agree with the producer-Andrew that no child should be employed as soldiers any where for any reason. My own cousine sister was abducted by rebels in Uganda. I have lost other young close relatives to what we cancall child soldiering in Uganda.
Keep uo the work.
CRY Uganda,an NGO based in Uganda works with vulnerable youth/chldren which includes children who have either been rescued or escaped from rebel captivity.
Can we as CRY Uganda have a copy of the documentary?
Agula Joseph Ogoror
Programme Officer, Conflcit Resolution by Youth (CRY) Uganda. Tel:+25677584000 POBox 11612 Kampala Uganda.
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