Head on over to the Hub (once you’ve read these great posts from Matisse and Sam, of course) for this week’s Picks… and see the end of this post for further links and info.
As well as images of continuing violence from the Rift Valley town of Naivasha, shot by our Kenyan partners Cemiride, we’ve also got footage from Licadho, a group that participated in last year’s Video Advocacy Institute (applications open for this year, folks…). Licadho’s short video, shot on a Flip camera, shows one example of the daily indignities suffered by residents of Dey Krahorm village in Phnom Penh “in a three-year campaign of harassment and intimidation of the community to coerce them to surrender their land to 7NG in return for new apartments on the outskirts of Phnom Penh, 20km away, or cash payments of far below the market value of the land.”
And after Australia’s Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd, gave a historic apology to the country’s indigenous communities, we have a video from EngageMedia taken on Australia Day, or what some have taken to calling Invasion Day, marking the impact of colonialisation on those communities.
Further links:
Keeping on the Australia theme, I like this audio/photo slideshow from the Sydney Morning Herald, which weaves together photographs taken of the stolen generations by the New South Wales Aborigines Welfare Board with interviews with some of the individuals depicted in them. It’s particularly interesting as an example of how individuals can re-appropriate their oppressor’s archival images of themselves and their histories. More to come on this theme later…
Cemiride // Licadho (background on the Dey Krahorm story here and here) // EngageMedia (Read Kevin Rudd’s historic apology. And if you don’t know the work of Swedish author Sven Lindqvist, you should. His latest book, Terra Nullius, takes his recent theme of European-driven genocides to Australia – read an extract here, et ici en francais.)



Sameer Padania 08:50 on January 10, 2008 Permalink |
A similar survey has just gone up over at GV:
http://www.globalvoicesonline.org/2008/01/10/kenya-moving-images-of-unrest-and-hope/
and for those on Facebook, there’s a set of videos you can watch:
http://www.facebook.com/video/?oid=6646557909
Jules Rincon 03:14 on January 11, 2008 Permalink |
Great coverage. Maybe when people notice that videos are being picked up by media, and that they start getting attention, people will start making and uploading more videos online.
One can hope.
Joshua Wiese 22:48 on January 18, 2008 Permalink |
I couldn’t believe the quick video story I caught on BBC’s website last night: not sure how to create a link here so you’ll have to cut and paste,
http://news.bbc.co.uk/player/nol/newsid_7190000/newsid_7192000/7192077.stm?bw=bb&mp=wm&asb=1&news=1&bbcws=1.
Really upsetting stuff to watch. Really upsetting. My heart goes out to everyone caught up in all this and I’ll do what I can to help.
Joshua Wiese 22:59 on January 18, 2008 Permalink |
If you’re interested in following another aspect of this crisis, perhaps catching a few more perspectives, I recommend the Kenya Elections 2007 project of Media Focus on Africa.
Nokia hooked up with a few NGOs to train volunteer citizen reporters and arm them with camera phones. These citizen reporters have been making short films on the election and posting them online for months now and they’ve all got really deep insights into what’s going on.
http://www.mediafocusondevelopment.com/
The video is so heavy. Anyone watching can picture themselves recording it on their own phone as if they were there.
Sameer Padania 23:25 on January 18, 2008 Permalink |
Hey Josh – thanks for those tips (there is a link to Media Focus in there – and I rudely forgot to hat-tip you!)…
Joshua Wiese 18:06 on January 19, 2008 Permalink |
No not at all Sameer – no hat tip needed. I commented excitedly, before even finishing your post. Thanks for the really thorough update.
Sameer Padania 06:49 on January 23, 2008 Permalink |
Here’s some more raw video, reportedly from Eldoret:
http://www.stopkenyagenocide.com/videos.html