Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Istanbul Hosts Human Rights Prize

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Istanbul Hosts Human Rights Prize

    ISTANBUL HOSTS HUMAN RIGHTS PRIZE
    By Ali Jaafar

    Variety Magazine
    April 11 2007

    Council of Europe backs award

    LONDON - The Council of Europe is launching FACE, its inaugural human
    rights film award, at the 26th Istanbul Film Festival, which runs
    until Sunday.

    The council's human rights commish Thomas Hammarberg will be on hand
    Saturday to award the prize to one of the 10 pix shortlisted for
    the competish.

    The films selected for the prize all deal with themes of political
    liberty and individual freedoms.

    Among the shortlist are African helmer Abderrahmane Sissako's "Bamako,"
    which puts the World Bank and IMF on trial for their role in Africa's
    economic woes, and Rachid Bouchareb's "Days of Glory," which tells
    the story of soldiers from France's North African colonies who helped
    liberate Gaul from Nazis during WWII.

    Also up for the award are two features supported by Eurimages, the
    council's fund for the co-production, distribution and exhibition of
    European films.

    "The Border Post," the first co-production between all the members
    of the former Yugoslavia, and Turkish pic "Home Coming" were both
    funded with Eurimages coin.

    Omer Ugur's "Home Coming" is proving particularly contentious for
    fest officials, given that pic deals scathingly with 1980 Turkish
    military coup.

    Fest officials were unclear if FACE would become a recurring part of
    the annual Istanbul fest. Fest had previously included a human right
    section for its past five editions.

    "We hope that we can create a platform where human rights are being
    discussed and hope this award can create a better understanding of
    human rights in the country," said Ustumgel Inanc, head of foreign
    press at the Istanbul fest.

    Turkey has had a series of run-ins with the European Union over
    accusations that its human rights record needs to be improved before
    it can be granted European Union membership.

    Political tensions have also heightened in the wake of the
    assassination in January of outspoken newspaper editor Hrant Dink,
    a Turk of Armenian descent, by a Turkish nationalist.

    An international outcry also followed attempts last year to imprison
    Orhan Pamuk, Turkey's most celebrated writer, on charges of "insulting
    Turkishness" after he referred to the genocide of Armenians in Turkey
    between 1915-1917 in an interview with a Swiss newspaper. The charges
    were eventually dropped.

    "Human rights are a sensitive issue in Turkey and have been the subject
    of many court cases but we're hoping to encourage the utilization
    of human rights themes and films with a certain cultural value,"
    said a source at the Council of Europe, who insisted on anonymity.

    http://www.variety.com/article/VR11179 62853.html?categoryid=13&cs=1
Working...
X