Archive for the ‘documentaries’ Category

Trading Women: Sept 22 & 29 showing at the Brunswick Theatre

Friday, August 31st, 2007

Showtime: Sat Sept 22 - 7pm & Sat Sept 29 - 4pm
Location: 296 Brunswick Avenue (2nd Floor), Toronto Ontario
Phone: 647-282-3627

An excerpt from the Brunswick theatre’s website.

TRADING WOMEN: Human Trafficking and the Global Sex Trade

Filmed in Burma, China, Laos, and Thailand, this is the first film to follow the trade in women in all its complexity and to consider the impact of this ‘far away’ problem on the global community.

Narrated by Oscar-winning actress Angelina Jolie, Trading Women follows the trade of women in all its complexity, entering the worlds of brothel owners, trafficked girls, voluntary sex-workers, corrupt police and anxious politicians.

The film also explores the international community’s response to the issue. Trading Women is the first film to demonstrate to viewers the relationship of the trade in drugs to the trade of women. The film dispels common beliefs about the sex trade, such as: “The problem is the parents - it’s part of their culture to sell their daughters;” “The sex trade exists because of Western sex tours;” and “They sell their girls for TV’s.”

Trading Women: April 29th showing at the Brunswick theatre

Tuesday, April 17th, 2007

Showtime: April 29th 2007 at 2pm.
Location: 296 Brunswick Avenue (2nd Floor), Toronto Ontario
Phone: 647-282-3627

An excerpt from the Brunswick theatre’s website.

TRADING WOMEN: Human Trafficking and the Global Sex Trade

Filmed in Burma, China, Laos, and Thailand, this is the first film to follow the trade in women in all its complexity and to consider the impact of this ‘far away’ problem on the global community.

Narrated by Oscar-winning actress Angelina Jolie, Trading Women follows the trade of women in all its complexity, entering the worlds of brothel owners, trafficked girls, voluntary sex-workers, corrupt police and anxious politicians.

The film also explores the international community’s response to the issue. Trading Women is the first film to demonstrate to viewers the relationship of the trade in drugs to the trade of women. The film dispels common beliefs about the sex trade, such as: “The problem is the parents - it’s part of their culture to sell their daughters;” “The sex trade exists because of Western sex tours;” and “They sell their girls for TV’s.”

An excerpt from the film:

Selling Sex in Heaven: Documentary on CBC

Tuesday, April 10th, 2007

For those with access to CBC Newsworld, “Selling Sex in Heaven“, a documentary about the sex industry in the Philippines, will be shown on Tuesday April 10, 2007 at 10pm ET/PT. Below is an excerpt about the documentary from the CBC’s website.

sellingsex2.jpgMila works at Heaven, a little bar located in “blowjob alley”, a notorious magnet for sex tourists in the Philippines. Like many young women forced into prostitution, Mila hopes that she’ll be rescued from Heaven and taken to America for a better life. Narrated by actor Kiefer Sutherland, Selling Sex in Heaven is a heartbreaking documentary that examines the sex trade industry in the Philippines and how this nasty but lucrative business traps many young women.

Selling Sex in Heaven visits the social hygiene clinic where hundreds of young women line up daily for health checks. Following these visits, the women are issued passes certifying their good health. They wear badges around their necks or on their bikinis while dancing for Western men. In a more sobering scene, the film captures a dramatic rescue of 17 young girls (some as young as 10 years old) from a local brothel.sellingsex.jpg

Told through the eyes of two female Canadian students and a male university professor from Nova Scotia now living in the Philippines, Selling Sex in Heaven captures two years of Mila’s life and the people who befriend her. Witness the complexity of prostitution and the conflicting attitudes of people affected by this demeaning industry, including prostitutes, community workers and even clients.

Selling Sex in Heaven was produced and directed by Meredith Ralston of Ralston Productions (Halifax).

“slave children” on the bbc

Friday, March 23rd, 2007

National Multi Cultural Institute has created a human trafficking search portal as a service to individuals and organizations working to eliminate human trafficking. Click on the visual links under “human trafficking t.v” to get download clips related to human trafficking from various organizations working in the field. Check out the portal…

For those with access to BBC2 television, “Slave Children”, a documentary about the trafficking of children by Rageh Omaar will be shown March 26th at 2100 BST. The documentary follows the story of five children from three continents. Below is an excerpt from the BBC website about Ali, a boy whose story is featured in the documentary.

Six-year-old Ali was picked up by Saudi authorities for begging on the streets of Jeddah.

He was smuggled into Saudi Arabia from Yemen in order to beg.

Ali says he ended up begging after physical abuse involving metal wire attacks on his back. He says he was beaten up when he said he did not want to beg all day.

Ali is one of thousands of Yemeni children sold to gangs and forced to beg each year.
Ali

These children are often sold by families who are duped into believing their offspring will get a better life.

Many of the children who are smuggled over the Saudi/Yemen border are beaten and sometimes even mutilated to become better, more effective beggars.

It is hard to be exact about figures, but in 2005 the Yemeni Ministry of Social Affairs acknowledged that about 300 children were crossing the border every month.

Click here to read more on the BBC website….


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