Award-winning docu on South African mining strike massacre , Miners Shot Down airs on Al Jazeera
In
August 2012, mineworkers in Lonmin, one of South Africa’s biggest
platinum mines, began a wildcat strike for better wages. Six days into
the strike, the police used live ammunition to brutally suppress the
strike, killing 34 and injuring many more. The police insisted that they
shot in self-defense, but Miners Shot Down tells a different story.
Using the point of view of the Marikana miners, Miners Show Down follows
the strike from day one, showing the courageous but isolated fight
waged by a group of low-paid workers against the combined forces of the
mining company, the ANC government and their allies in the National
Union of Mineworkers. What emerges is collusion at the top, spiraling
violence and the country’s first post-apartheid massacre.
The
documentary has been a festival favourite, opening leading
international documentary festivals like One World and Sheffield, and
winning Best Film at One World in Prague; Movies That Matter in The
Hague; and The Human Rights Human Dignity International Film Festival in
Myanmar.
In
South Africa, it’s won awards from the two leading festivals for
documentaries, scooping the Special Choice Award at Encounters South
African International Documentary Festival in June and both the Best
South African Documentary and Amnesty International Human Rights Awards
at Durban International Film Festival in July 2014.
The Durban jury said, “Miners Shot Down emerged
as the overall winner of the award for its profoundly moving portrayal
of the Marikana miners’ massacre. The human rights abuses so vividly
portrayed include the right to life, the right to justice, the right to
protection by the police, the right to know, the right to peaceful
protest and the right to human dignity. This film is particularly
important in South Africa at the present time, given the Farlam Judicial
Commission currently investigating the tragedy.”
The
ongoing Farlam Commission of Inquiry into the massacre began in October
2012 and recently had its deadline extended again until 30 September
2014.
Screening times: 13 Aug 22.00 CAT| 14 Aug 14.00 CAT | 15 Aug 03.00 CAT | 16 Aug 08.00 CAT
What people are saying:
“Rehad Desai’s beautifully filmed and uncompromising documentary, Miners Shot Down,
is about so much more than the massacre by police of 34 striking
workers at the Lonmin platinum mine at Marikana in August 2012. The film
offers a unique prism through which to view contemporary power
relations in ‘democratic’ South Africa (and perhaps globally) where the
unholy trinity of capital, politics and security were (and are) pitted
against labour…” Marianne Thamm, Daily Maverick
“Literally left me speechless… The world looked different when I emerged from the cinema. It doesn’t often happen to me.” Charl Blignaut, CityPress
“Important, comprehensive and damning… Essential viewing.” Encounters South African Documentary Festival
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