"If we still believe in ourselves that one day, our country will practice Democracy, wiping out every piece of the current army trash led by General Than Shwe, and we are striving for it no matter what the costs will be, our belief will become the reality."
~Kyal Zin Lin Latt

Wednesday, June 23, 2010


Burma cyclone film wins top UK award

By DVB

The documentary Orphans of Burma’s Cyclone was last night honoured with a prestigious One World Media Award at a ceremony in London.

The film, shown on Channel 4’s Dispatches documentary strand, charts the life of a group of children orphaned by cyclone Nargis, which struck Burma’s southern Irrawaddy coast in May 2008 and killed 140,000. It was one of the worst recorded natural disasters to have hit Southeast Asia.

A team of undercover DVB cameramen arrived in the delta region two months after the cyclone and began filming the nine children, some as young as two. One of the cameramen, Ngwe Soe Linn, was eventually tracked down by Burmese intelligence and sentenced to 13 years in prison.

His fellow cameraman, ‘Z’, has since managed to flee Burma. He told DVB that the award was a “big victory” for Ngwe Soe Linn. “He does not know what’s happening; he doesn’t know what the results of his documentary are. I believe that if he knows he will be very happy. I hope I will send this information to him very soon.”

It is the second major award for the documentary, directed by Evan Williams, and wins the One World ‘child rights’ category. In 2009, the film won the Rory Peck Award, one of the world’s leading honours for cameramen working in dangerous environments.

“The main concern during filming is security – even in the villages there are many informers who give information to authorities,” said Z. “We were far from town, so if we hear an engine from a boat or see a stranger we have to run, because we don’t know who is who. This fear arose every day.”

He added that developing a relationship with the children being filmed was crucial to the documentary’s success. “We have to build a familiarity with them; we know that they are likely to have been mentally affected by the cyclone so we need to know them well.”

The Burmese government was roundly condemned for its lax response to the cyclone: foreign aid was initially refused and journalists were barred from entering the region, while a number of cyclone relief workers have since been imprisoned, some for as long as 35 years.

Reference:

This is from DVB (Democratic Voice of Burma).

My opinion:

Congratulations for those cameramen who risked their lives to make a video of children affected by Nargis cyclone!!! I'm proud of them.

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