What's new

Visa not garnted to director for Mukhtaran Mai documentary

sparklingway

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
May 12, 2009
Messages
3,878
Reaction score
0
Personal Note :- I have always loathed as how our society tries to aggressively protect what it falsely assumes as an "embarrassment". It is downright wrong to try to block a documentary on the struggle of Mukhtaran Mai. This decision emanates from the very opinion that originates in the public and is a sad reflection on how our society tries to hide social evils by denying their very existence. We should have been proud for in the end (after international pressure), Mukhataran got justice through the courts and the whole civil society came to her rescue.

Oscar-nominated director denied Pak visa

Monday, April 26, 2010

By Rauf Klasra

ISLAMABAD: A world renowned film director Katia Lund — whose Hollywood movie “City of God” was nominated for five Oscars — has been denied Pakistani visa after the Foreign Office came to know she wanted to shoot a world class movie on the struggle of rape victim Mukhtaran Mai.

Katia was working on a Hollywood movie project to make a film to tell the heroic tale of Mukhtaran Mai to international audience as how a rural Pakistani woman, despite heavy odds, rose up to bring her tormentors to book.

The film was said to focus on positive side of the Pakistani society to highlight the gallant struggle of a rural girl living in a society bound by shackles of tradition, who, with the help of Pakistani media, civil society and the Supreme Court, got the accused punished for the evil.

Katia, 44, has withdrawn her application for visa from the Pakistani mission in Brazil, after it was dumped at the Pakistan Foreign Office in Islamabad.

Talking to The News, an FO official explained that FO cannot issue such a visa on its own and as per procedure laid down, such an application is sent to the Ministry of Information and that of Interior for clearance.

Following is the e-mail by Katia Lund sent to Pakistani Embassy official to get her passport back: “Re: Susan Lund - Pakistan Visa Mr Raheel and Mr Maroof: As the Embassy of Pakistan has shown itself in the last three months to be unable or unwilling to answer to my visa request, any of my emails and requests for dialogue, I will be withdrawing my American passport from your hands. I am very disappointed with the way your embassy has handled my case. I wasted money buying a ticket at your request, changing the date several times and making long distance calls.

“You can be assured that although you may withhold a visa, you have not delayed my research or work on Mukhtar’s story. I have successfully accomplished all my research objectives via skype, while you denied my visa. Thanks to the modern world, your power to withhold visas has failed to deprive people of the right to tell their story. You managed to keep nothing but your own silence. I am sorry that you are so backward in your worldview. Please deliver my American passport to Ludimilla, as DHL will be collecting it on Thursday morning. Good luck in your attempt to shape the image of your government. Thank you for your help: Susan Kate Lund.”


Meanwhile, according to investigation conducted by The News, Katia Lund applied to the Pakistani mission in Brasilia, Brazil. She had been to Pakistan before in March 2007 and stayed at Meerwala with Mukhtaran Mai. In her introduction/reference letter to the embassy, she even informed them about her ongoing film projects. And there’s no secret that she’s been writing/directing the movie on the life and struggle of Mukhtaran Mai.

Although, she informed the Pakistani mission about her illustrious film career but was asked to submit reference letters from a couple of ‘prominent’ Pakistanis. She did this and tendered several references that included one from MQM’s Farooq Sattar but to no avail. She booked her seat initially for Feb 14, 2010 on the embassy’s advice, then for Feb 21 but the visa didn’t come. While anticipating Pakistan trip, she sent her two-year-old son Max to her brother in America as she was told by the embassy officials that the visa could be issued anytime.

The embassy people told Katia that the phone number of her host in Multan was wrong but an IB (Intelligence Bureau) official had already paid visit to her host, to get all the required information from him.

Musharraf regime was lately hostile to Mukhtaran Mai and took all the measures, including placing her on the ECL to deny her the fame she’s enjoying internationally since she started a struggle for justice and bringing social reforms in a backward part of the country. The situation Katia faced seemed to be continuity of Musharraf’s regime’s policy of hushing up Mukhtaran’s story.

Katia Lund is an American-Brazilian film director and screenwriter. Her most notable work was as co-director of the film “City of God”, which was nominated for five Oscars. Having grown up in a middle-class family, she had little knowledge of the plight of those living in Rio de Janeiro’s shantytowns (favelas). Then, she was hired to work on the Spike Lee-directed music video for Michael Jackson’s “They Don’t Care About Us” which was filmed in a favela. The experience opened her eyes and she was determined to make films about the dwellers of these poor neighbourhoods to help raise social consciousness in Brazil.

In 1996, she began work on the documentary NotÌcias de uma Guerra Particular (News of a Private War), an exploration of ongoing battle between favelas’ armed drug dealers (many of whom are small children) and Rio de Janeiro’s police. It was released in 1999 to critical acclaim and was nominated for an Emmy Award after airing on Public Broadcasting Service (PBS). She won numerous MTV Video Music Awards Latin America.

In 2001, Lund was invited by Fernando Meirelles to co-direct Golden Gate (Palace II), a short film about two young boys in a favela. The film won several awards in film festivals all over the world. Lund and Meirelles continued their collaboration with the film “City of God” which received international acclaim and was nominated for five Academy Awards. The success of that film was the springboard for the television series ‘City of Men’, a continuation of the story told in ‘Golden Gate’. Lund produced the show with Meirelles and directed four episodes. The show was a major hit in Brazil.
 
.
Send Mukhtara Mai to USA and ask her to reside there forever :angry: and work in this movie as a leading actress

I have sympthy for her for being gang raped but nobody has ever taken long list of donations and benefits just because she was gang raped. She is also shouting in the media - close her chapter for good please :angry:
 
.
good move by govt, some pakistanis are bikao log, and can even sell their country just for fame and money..
 
.
Send Mukhtara Mai to USA and ask her to reside there forever :angry: and work in this movie as a leading actress

I have sympthy for her for being gang raped but nobody has ever taken long list of donations and benefits just because she was gang raped. She is also shouting in the media - close her chapter for good please :angry:
You can't say this for certainty.

Look Gang rapes are still happening. Its basically not even her, she seems like some dumb simple girl and the NGOs behind her are pulling the strings.

However if you look at the fact that such a documentary would be beneficial for Pakistan if Pakistanis see it and make a change for the positive in society.
 
.
very good move, She must stop 'privatizing her rape'
 
.
No more publicity of her Rape !

Thousands of Gang Rapes happen in USA every week , why dont they make Films on them ??

What is so special about Pakistan , are we blessed or cursed ?
 
.
Enough already about this. The woman is a heroine and extremely brave. She is doing good work for the country. And is being helped by many quarters in her quest. She is now also happily married to a man who by all accounts worships her. Let's get on with life now and stop beating the rape drum...
 
.
Thousands of Gang Rapes happen in USA every week , why dont they make Films on them ??
Have you tried to search and see one? Have you ever studied criminal statistics and criminal pschology? Have you tried to study how deep the French and American psychologists have tried to bury in the mind of rapists? No, you have not.

I expected the same response. People will never accept social evils, deny their existence or complain about them being an "embarassment".

What Mukhataran has done is pure social work. She has become a symbol of struggle to every poor, peasant girl who tries to stand up to her feudal masters. You might not agree with her case getting media attention, but her case deserved it after our worthy military junta ruler tried not to "project a bad image of Pakistan" and inhumanely referred to her in his interview more than once.

It wa supposed to be a story about her struggle and the positive effects. The myopic, shortsighted, convoluted and conspiratorial mindset forces to think again in the world-is-against-us-only-show-bad-image kind of way.
 
.
Have you tried to search and see one? Have you ever studied criminal statistics and criminal pschology? Have you tried to study how deep the French and American psychologists have tried to bury in the mind of rapists? No, you have not.

I am a part of these socities for a fair bit of time and i know what goes about in Rape related matters.

But my Question stands still why the hell they are so intrested in a rape that happened in Pakistan and why they are not Making any Films on the Rapes happening in their own countries on Daily Basis , do they find ours more spicey and would be a best seller ?

Why dont these Stories are not getting Filmed & what is so Special about Mukhtaran Mai ?

Dad charged with daughter's rape, murder - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
Austrian incest father 'served time for rape' - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
Australia: 20-year-old jailed for 55 years on gang rape charges

I expected the same response.

But your Preception is Wrong.

People will never accept social evils, deny their existence or complain about them being an "embarassment".

You are again asuming it by yourself , did i say so ?????

What Mukhataran has done is pure social work.

Yes A LOT of social work which is appriciateable and she got rewarded back .
BBC NEWS | South Asia | The rape victim who fought back

Mukhtaran Bibi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Case of Mukhtaran Mai

Donations to her:
Mukhtaran Mai & Women's Rights in Pakistan | causes.com

She has become a symbol of struggle to every poor, peasant girl who tries to stand up to her feudal masters.

Anyone denied it ?

You might not agree with her case getting media attention, but her case deserved it after our worthy military junta ruler tried not to "project a bad image of Pakistan" and inhumanely referred to her in his interview more than once.

She got "Well deserved" Publicity in Pakistan and abroad but if it goes too far it becomes a curse.


It wa ssupposed to be a story about her struggle and the positive effects.

Its getting more "Glamours" which is not good for our Image neither it serves her innitial purpose.

The myopic, shortsighted, convoluted and conspiratorial mindset forces to think again in the world-is-against-us-only-show-bad-image kind of way.


I have no argument with that as i agree with what she did but what i dont agree with is that Someone else comes and Films a Rape that happened in pakistan which would add into our already destroyed Image internationally.

It must not be sold as a Product !
 
.
Mai denies having millions in her account

ISLAMABAD: Mukhtar Mai said on Tuesday that rumours of her earning millions of rupees by publicising her gang rape ordeal was baseless and propaganda.

“I have Rs 2.2 million and not millions of rupees in my account,” she told reporters at National Library. She said that out of the Rs 2.2m, she had spent Rs 1.2m on constructing a school in her village.

She said the government had excluded her name from the Exit Control List (ECL), but that she had no intention of living abroad. She said the government had played an important role in assuring justice to her.

She also thanked the government for awarding the Madar-e-Millat Fatima Jinnah gold medal to her. online

Radish, banana removed from LG symbols list

ISLAMABAD: Justice Abdul Hameed Dogar, acting chief election commissioner, has directed returning officers not to allocate the symbols of radish and banana in the second phase of local bodies elections.

Although these symbols had been allocated to candidates of the first phase of the local bodies elections, the Election Commission had been asked to delete them from the symbols list of the second phase. staff report

9 hurt in Astore football violence

Staff Report

GILGIT: Nine spectators when injured at a football match in Astore district when some supporters of rival teams began firing in a stadium on Monday. Police sources said that the match between rivals Eidgah and Chungarah had always been a sensitive occasion, characterised by clashes between fans, however, firearms had never been used at the stadium before. The injured have been admitted to Astore Civil Hospital for treatment, but no information was available about their condition.

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
.
The Pakistani who fought back and won
Woman raped for brother's transgression is Woman of the Year
By Andrea Koppel
CNN



Saturday, November 5, 2005 Posted: 0636 GMT (1436 HKT)

Editor's note: In our Behind the Scenes series, CNN correspondents share their experiences in covering news.

After Mukhtar Mai was raped on orders of village elders, she fought to have her attackers punished.

story.mai.cnn.jpg


Manage Alerts | What Is This? NEW YORK (CNN) -- Mukhtar Mai is a woman of few words. She speaks so softly at times that she barely can be heard. She does not smile easily and is quite shy.

But there is a steely toughness to Mai, a victim who is trying to change the way women are treated in Pakistan.

"I have a message to the women of the world and all the women who have been raped or any of the kind of violation: that, no matter what, they must talk about it and they must fight for justice," Mai said. (Watch how the quiet, angry woman made a difference -- 3:33)

Her fight began in 2002, when she was gang-raped on the order of village tribal council elders. The rape was meant to restore her family's honor after her younger brother was accused of being with a girl from a rival tribe.

In a country where, Human Rights Watch says, the vast majority of rapes and other violent crimes against women goes unpunished, Mai broke her silence. She not only pressed charges, she fought her case all the way to the nation's highest court.

In a case that sent shock waves through Pakistan, her attackers were found guilty. She used her government compensation money to build schools in her village. Since then, Mai has become a kind of Rosa Parks of Pakistan.

"First there was just my home. Now I have to deal with the whole world," she said in an interview.

Mai was obviously overwhelmed and exhausted from the travel and the hectic schedule she'd been keeping since arriving in the United States in late October. She came to receive a Woman of the Year award from Glamour, a magazine she had never heard of.

The contrast could not be more stark: a magazine known for promoting hot bodies and beauty tips honoring a devout Muslim who dresses modestly in a sari and is usually covered head-to-toe. She was introduced by Brooke Shields.

Shields called her "the amazing Mukhtar Mai." First lady Laura Bush said "she proves that one woman really can change the world."

Glamour magazine gave Mai a check for $20,000. Mai said she planned to donate $5,000 to help the female victim's of Pakistan's recent massive earthquake. The rest of the money would be used to set up a hotline and shelter for women in Pakistan who want to escape abusive relationships or to recover from the trauma of rape.

Although Mai is happy that she serves as an inspiration, she acknowledges her newfound position carries a burden.

"I do feel that if I stop now or step back it will harm a lot of women. Mai said. "So, I have to keep going and keep helping others."

CNN.com - The Pakistani who fought back and won - Nov 4, 2005
 
.
The visa should be granted and the documentary should be made without any interference. However, Mukhtaran Mai went a bit too far or we can blame NGOs for that. In any case, the documentary will help people to understand the meaning of "civilization."
 
.
She should be allowed to come to Pakistan. People should be ashamed of themselves that say that she is profiting from her rape.
 
.
A One-Woman War on Injustice

Mukhtar Mai, a former Glamour Woman of the Year, helps every abused woman who comes to her door.


near01_mukhtarmaiupdate.jpg


Now, thanks in part to donations from readers like you, she’s opened a crisis center. Is this the world’s next Mother Teresa?
July 1, 2008 By Carla Power More about real-life heroes
•Author Kelly Corrigan Has a Dare For You…
•Former Child Bride Nujood Ali's New Book=Weekend Inspiration
•"I Chose to Live": One Woman's Story of Surviving Sexual Abuse
•The ESPN Girl Takes a Stand
•These Sisters Rescued 54 Orphans Meerwala, Pakistan, is not a place where you’d expect to see the stirrings of revolution. Our car judders over dirt roads to reach the village, which is just a few groups of houses huddled in green fields three hours from the nearest city. Boys bathe in the brown canal. Men loll under mango trees. Farmers tend sugarcane, as they’ve done for centuries. But in one compound, a minor miracle is under way.


At the Mukhtar Mai Women’s Crisis Relief Center, in a spare single room hung with inscriptions from the Koran, a clutch of women are gathered. They have come, traveling by bus and then by foot, in hopes that one woman, Mukhtar Mai, can help them fight their battles. In 2005, when Glamour first interviewed Mukhtar, she dreamed of starting a women’s shelter. A year later, it’s thriving. Recently, the center helped a 23-year-old victim of karo kiri—the rural Pakistani custom of raping, maiming or even killing a woman suspected of having an illicit relationship with a man. Bludgeoned with an ax, she was near death when she reached the center. Mukhtar got her to the hospital, sheltered her for weeks and pressed police to register her case. Now the girl is safe back at home, and her attackers have fled. Mukhtar is well-known for such rescues, and her reputation draws a steady stream of anguished visitors, like the ones she sees today.

Glamour’s photographer and I settle on a straw mat, batting away flies as the women share their stories: Amina tells of her brother, a father of seven, who has been kidnapped. “Only God can help us—or you, Mukhtar,” she pleads. The man’s mother pulls his dog-eared photo from the folds of her shawl. Mukhtar says she will use her police contacts to investigate. Next a widow, Maksudan, tearfully claims a powerful tribe stole her land. “I’m helpless,” she says. “They will kill me if I go to the police.” Mukhtar listens, still as a statue. Then in her calm, low voice, she assures Maksudan that she will call her lawyer.

“Not a single day is empty of these cases,” Mukhtar tells me later. As her influence grows, so does the horror of the cases she takes on. For women whose husbands have thrown acid at them, she finds doctors and lawyers. Some karo kiri victims have arrived without noses—a common punishment—and she has helped get them surgery. This summer, an entire family stayed with Mukhtar for three months, after rivals broke their children’s legs in a land dispute. Mukhtar turns no one away. She knows she may be their only hope.

Her own battle
Mukhtar’s activism springs from a personal trauma. Four years ago, at about 28 (she is unsure of her exact age), she was gang-raped at the order of a tribal council. The rape was conceived as punishment for her younger brother’s alleged affair with a woman from the Mastois, a higher-caste tribe. (Mukhtar’s family says he’s completely innocent.) Afterward, Mukhtar considered suicide, a common response following such a loss of honor. When she raised going to the police, her father initially told her to keep quiet. Her elder brother threatened suicide himself if she went public. Only her mother, Bachual Haton, urged Mukhtar to seek justice. “I told her, ‘It is your right,’ ” says Bachual, a heavyset woman with a strong, broad face and dark eyes. “I told her to fight. Someone has to be the first drop of rain.”
 
.
She should be allowed to come to Pakistan. People should be ashamed of themselves that say that she is profiting from her rape.

Yes, there is a difference between highlighting social problems and profiting. I want this documentary to be made because it will highlight different social problems. By saying that, profiting on the rape is not something to be proud of.
 
.

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom