Second trailer for Burma VJ.
Burma VJ: Reporting From a Closed Country sheds light on a brutal 40-year military regime operating in a closed country, far from the eyes of the mainstream global media. Although there was a brief uprising in 1988, the military junta soon retook power, violently suppressing any opposition to the reigning regime. Aung San Suu Kyi, an elected official and hero of the people, has been under house arrest ever since.
In August 2007, economic desperation, coupled with the junta's decision to lift fuel subsidies, triggered the peaceful uprising that would come to be known as the "Saffron Revolution," after the color of the monks' robes. 'Burma VJ' documents the dramatic days of the September 2007 revolution, when nonviolent protests gave way to military brutality, as Buddhist monks, students and ordinary citizens were inspired to march, and in some cases die, for the rights they have been denied for so long.
Risking torture, life in jail and even death, the young members of the Democratic Voice of Burma (DVB) kept up the flow of news from their closed, military-controlled country. Burma VJ focuses on "Joshua," one of the young video journalists of the DVB who worked undercover to counter government propaganda. His intrepid and resilient reporting revealed the growing tension in the months and weeks before the September 2007 uprising. (For obvious reasons, Østergaard cannot disclose the real identity of Joshua or any of the other activists who supplied material for broadcast.)
Joshua coordinated the VJs' efforts from Thailand, becoming an essential liaison to the reporters on the ground when the monks suddenly led a massive but peaceful uprising against the military regime. As Burma returned to the world stage after decades of obscurity, it was left to Joshua and his fellow journalists to document the events and bear witness to the world. Smuggled out of the country by Internet upload or through couriers, their footage was sent to Oslo, Norway, where it was broadcast back into Burma via satellite to counter the regime's misinformation.
The uprising reached its pinnacle when the army fired into the crowd and killed a Japanese journalist point blank. The VJs captured the shooting on camera. The monks all disappeared, likely taken by the police, and only students were left to demonstrate. The body of a monk was found floating in a creek. Rangoon became a war zone. The Internet was entirely shut down by the government, making it harder to get images out.
By December 2007, the government had succeeded in shutting down the DVB and arrested three reporters. Other journalists went into hiding, and Joshua had to rebuild the entire network. Today, everything is back to "normal," with the junta's propaganda machine ruling the media in Burma. However, on the ruins of the original network, Joshua and the Democratic Voice of Burma have recruited new VJs who were inspired by the events of September 2007. They are now undergoing camera and safety training, getting ready for the next popular uprising in Burma, as the media battle against the junta continues.
1 min 3 sec
Views
12,122
Posted On
October 19, 2010
Anders Ostergaard
Writer
Unknown or Not Available
Studio
Independent
Release
July 17, 2009
Unknown or Not Available
No Music Available