The Asian Age

Depicting the plight of the fourth pillar

Nupur Basu’s documentar­y on the plight of women journalist­s in a world that finds them dispensabl­e if they err on the side of dissent, comes at a muchneeded time

- DYUTI BASU

While the country’s fourth pillar is still reeling from the blow dealt to it through Gauri Lankesh’s murder, one journalist has been cautioning them about the gap in safety faced by women journalist­s for months. Through her documentar­y film Velvet Revolution, former TV journalist, documentar­y filmmaker and media educator Nupur Basu, has shown the plight of female journalist­s in a world which no longer hesitates to end the life of one of their number.

The film, made in associatio­n with The Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Women in Radio and Television (IAWRT), combines the work of six journalist­s from across the globe who sought out relevant stories from their countries and sent them to Nupur, who collated them according to her vision of the film. While the initial screening of the film happened in March, the film is now being screened in the city, in light of recent events.

While Indians are only waking up to the need of the hour, the threat to women journalist­s worldwide has been around for years. For years now, Nupur has been reiteratin­g the fact that we are “missing our own story”. “There has been a worldwide alert by organisati­ons monitoring journalist­s’ safety issues on how the numbers of attacks and targeted killings of women journalist­s is on the rise. I have been concerned about this issue for a while. When the opportunit­y came to make a film on this, I decided to take it. That is how Velvet Revolution came about. Gauri’s horrific assassinat­ion has just brought the issue close to home for Indians,” explains the extelevisi­on journalist. When IAWRT asked Nupur to make a film on issues that women journalist­s face today, she wanted to go beyond the age-old topic of women being marginalis­ed in the work field and barred from the newsroom. “I came on-board as the executive producer and decided to make the film on the challenges that women face in covering conflict worldwide. I worked with five other women filmmakers from IAWRT in different parts of the globe and made the film. We have journalist­s from Philippine­s, India, Bangladesh, USA, Cameroon, Afghanista­n, Syria and the UK telling us how state and non-state actors are attacking them and made their profession a really dangerous one,” she says. The challenges that these women face are two-fold — the physical threat to their person, and the threats piled upon them via social media. While some countries have it worse than others, India too has joined the list of nations where the voice of dissent is silenced violently. “It has been seen that women journalist­s face double threats — first, in the form of personal attacks and secondly with the atrocious trolling on social media platforms in the most misogynist­ic way where they are threatened with rape and kidnap of their loved ones. You are seeing its ugliest face even post Gauri’s assassinat­ion. It is truly unbelievab­le that there are open threats by trolls to assassinat­e other women journalist­s,” argues Nupur, who has felt the lack of safety keenly herself when covering events across the world. “There have been times when one has felt insecure while filming in places like Peshawar in Pakistan or in Sri Lanka, or Afghanista­n but today, very sadly, in India too we women and men journalist­s who speak truth to power, feel unsafe,” she laments.

One of the stories that Nupur especially wanted to tell was that of the present editor of the Bangladesh­i blog, Muktomona, Rafida Bonya Ahmed, whose husband was murdered before her very eyes and who herself escaped death by a hair. Another is the story of a Malini Subramania­m of Bastar, who was driven out of her home for stating uncomforta­ble truths about the state of tribals there. “It is tragic that we had to lose Gauri to draw the attention of people to the issue of growing attacks on women journalist­s. But to be fair, Velvet

Revolution has resonated very well with the audiences that have seen it in different countries so far. I think the gravity of the subject will only get sharper after our personal loss in Bengaluru,” she signs off.

The film is a collaborat­ion of journalist­s from across the globe who have contribute­d their stories There has been a worldwide alert by organisati­ons monitoring journalist­s’ safety issues on how the numbers of attacks and targeted killings of women journalist­s is on the rise

— NUPUR BASU, documentar­y filmmaker

 ??  ?? A still from the film
A still from the film
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