Pakistan’s leading filmmaker nominated for two more Emmys for gender justice docuseries

Producer Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy takes part in a Q&A following HBO's documentary screening of the Oscar winning film "Saving Face" at Asia Society on March 5, 2012 in New York City. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 30 June 2021
Follow

Pakistan’s leading filmmaker nominated for two more Emmys for gender justice docuseries

  • Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy produced the five-episode series in collaboration with the Global Fund for Women
  • Shot in five different countries, series becomes first YouTube original series production from Pakistan

RAWALPINDI: A docuseries produced by Pakistani filmmaker Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy has been nominated for two Daytime Emmy Awards by The National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences in New York, the movie maker and her team confirmed to Arab News on Wednesday.
The series — “Fundamental. Gender Justice. No Exceptions” — has been shot in five countries in collaboration with Obaid-Chinoy’s SOC Films and the Global Fund for Women.
Each episode of the series profiles grassroots movements and community leaders striving to address gender-justice issues in their respective social and political context.
The episode on Pakistan focuses on Rukhshanda Naz, an attorney, who is fighting to end child marriage in the country.




This photo taken in 2019 shows Pakistani human rights lawyer Rukhshanda Naz in Peshawar during the making of “Fundamental. Gender Justice. No Exceptions.” (Photo courtesy: SOC Films)

“It was incredible for our producers, and our camera team to be able to travel to Brazil, Georgia, the United States, Kenya to tell stories of activists on the ground in all those countries and to realize that women around the world still have major advances to make in order for them to have equal rights,” Obaid-Chinoy told Arab News on the phone. “We have been able to show the champions and the struggles to a global audience, allowing us to shine a light on activists who are risking their lives literally every day to create a better tomorrow.”




In this picture taken in 2019, Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy’s film crew conducts an interview in Brazil for the docuseries “Fundamental. Gender Justice. No Exceptions.” (Photo courtesy: SOC Films)

In addition to Global Fund for Women, she added, the series was created with YouTube and joined the ranks of the platform’s original series productions, something no other Pakistani production house has accomplished as yet.
“For SOC Films to be given this opportunity to create a YouTube original series means that our team is able to compete with the best in the world,” the filmmaker said. “I am proud of the fact that we are creating the next generation of storytellers from Pakistan, not just men and women who can tell stories of Pakistan but men and women who are capable of telling any story, anywhere in the world.”
The producers of the series concurred with Obaid-Chinoy.




In this picture taken in 2019, Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy’s film crew conducts an interview in Wisconsin, USA, for the docuseries “Fundamental. Gender Justice. No Exceptions.” (Photo courtesy: SOC Films)

“Producing the Fundamentals series has been one of the highlights of my career as it brought to me the opportunity to meet some brilliant women rights champions and activists from all around the world including Pakistan, USA, Brazil and Georgia,” Safyah Zafar Usmani, who worked with Obaid-Chinoy to produce the episodes, told Arab News.




In this picture taken in 2019, SOC Film works on its docuseries “Fundamental. Gender Justice. No Exceptions.” in Georgia. (Photo courtesy: SOC Films)

“We have achieved this feat,” said her co-producer Shahrukh Waheed, “while living and making films in a country where there are no real venues for documentary filmmakers to feature their work or a thriving culture of documentary viewership but our passion for telling amazing stories of empowerment, hope and resilience have brought our films to the eyes of the world. That’s a great feeling.”




In this picture taken in 2019, Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy’s film crew conducts an interview in Kenya for the docuseries “Fundamental. Gender Justice. No Exceptions.” (Photo courtesy: SOC Films)

SOC Films and Obaid-Chinoy have previously won four Emmys, including the best documentary award for “A Girl in the River: The Price of Forgiveness” and “Saving Face.”
The filmmaker won the outstanding current affairs documentary award for “Children of the Taliban.”
The 48th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards will be celebrated in two live-streamed events on July 17 and July 18, 2021.


Pakistan farmers announce nationwide protest from May 10 amid wheat import crisis

Updated 05 May 2024
Follow

Pakistan farmers announce nationwide protest from May 10 amid wheat import crisis

  • Farmers are demanding the government stop wheat imports that have flooded markets, leading to price slump
  • Agriculture contributes about 24 percent of the GDP and accounts for half of the employed labor force in Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani farmers on Sunday announced a nationwide protest over the wheat import crisis from May 10, a day after Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif promised to address their grievances.
Farmers in Pakistan’s Punjab province, which produces most of the wheat crop, are demanding the government stop wheat imports that have flooded the market at a time when they expect bumper crop.
They say the import of wheat in the second half of 2023 and the first three months of this year has resulted in excess amounts of the commodity in the country, leading to reduced prices.
On Saturday, PM Sharif took notice of the matter and formed a committee under the Ministry of National Food Security and Research to address farmer grievances, Pakistani state media reported.
“On the 10th [of May], after the Friday prayers, we are initiating protest from Multan and this protest will be expanded to the whole of Pakistan,” Khalid Khokhar, who heads the Kissan Ittehad Pakistan, said at a press conference.
“Thousands of farmers will come, there will be hundreds of tractors, trailers. Animals, cattle and children and women will also be accompanied.”
Agriculture is the backbone of Pakistan’s economy and constitutes its largest sector. According to the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (PBS), agriculture contributes about 24 percent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and accounts for half of the employed labor force in the country.
However, the prices of wheat have dropped in Pakistan in recent weeks and are much below the government’s support price of Rs3,900 per 40-kilogram bag.
“We do not have any option other than this. The mafia made Rs100 billion, Pakistan’s $1 billion worth of foreign exchange was spent and the farmers incurred around Rs400 billion losses,” Khokhar said.
“They slaughtered 60 million farmers just for the sake of corruption.”


Pakistan’s Dr. Shahzad Baig makes it to TIME’s 100 world leaders in health

Updated 05 May 2024
Follow

Pakistan’s Dr. Shahzad Baig makes it to TIME’s 100 world leaders in health

  • Before arriving in Pakistan, Baig was a technical adviser to Nigeria’s polio eradication effort, which remained successful
  • Pakistan, Afghanistan are only two countries in world where polio continues to threaten health and well-being of children

ISLAMABAD: US news magazine TIME has included Dr. Shahzad Baig, the Pakistan Polio Eradication Programme’s national coordinator, to its list of 100 most influential people across the world in the field of health in 2024.
The list, titled ‘TIME100 HEALTH,’ this week honored individuals from across the world for their services for fresh discoveries, novel treatments, and global victories over disease.
Baig was recognized for his efforts for the eradication of poliovirus, which mainly affects children under the age of ten years by invading their nervous system, and can cause paralysis or even death.
Pakistan and Afghanistan are the only two countries in the world where polio continues to threaten the health and well-being of children. 
“On the front lines in the effort to stamp it [polio] out is Dr. Shahzad Baig, national coordinator of Pakistan’s polio-eradication program,” TIME wrote on its website.
“In 2019, polio disabled or killed 147 people in Pakistan; since Baig assumed the position, in 2021, case counts have plummeted, with only six children stricken in 2023.”
Before arriving in Pakistan, Baig was a technical adviser to Nigeria’s polio eradication effort, which succeeded spectacularly, according to the US magazine.
In 2020, the African country became the most recent one in the world to be declared polio-free.
“If Baig has his way, Pakistan will be the next,” it added.


Canada has ‘political compulsion’ to blame India for Sikh slaying — New Delhi

Updated 05 May 2024
Follow

Canada has ‘political compulsion’ to blame India for Sikh slaying — New Delhi

  • Canadian police on Friday arrested three for the murder of Hardeep Singh Nijjar, saying they were investigating their links to Indian government
  • The killing soured Ottawa-New Delhi diplomatic ties after PM Trudeau said there were ‘credible allegations’ linking Indian intelligence to crime

NEW DELHI: Canada’s investigation into alleged Indian involvement in the assassination of a Sikh separatist in Vancouver last year is a “political compulsion,” New Delhi’s foreign minister said after three Indian citizens were arrested over the killing.
Canadian police on Friday arrested the trio for the murder of Hardeep Singh Nijjar, saying they were investigating their links to the Indian government, “if any.”
The killing sent diplomatic relations between Ottawa and New Delhi into a tailspin last autumn after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said there were “credible allegations” linking Indian intelligence to the crime.
India vehemently rejected the allegations as “absurd,” halting the processing of visas for a time and forcing Canada to significantly reduce its diplomatic presence in the country.
“It is their political compulsion in Canada to blame India,” the Press Trust of India news agency quoted external affairs minister S. Jaishankar as saying on Saturday.
Thousands of people were killed in the 1980s during a separatist insurgency aimed at creating a Sikh homeland known as Khalistan, which was put down by security forces.
The movement has largely petered out within India, but in the Sikh diaspora — whose largest community is in Canada, with around 770,000 people — it retains support among a vocal minority.
New Delhi has sought to persuade Ottawa not to grant Sikh separatists visas or political legitimacy, Jaishankar said, since they are “causing problems for them (Canada), for us and also for our relationship.”
He added that Canada does not “share any evidence with us in certain cases, police agencies also do not cooperate with us.”
Nijjar immigrated to Canada in 1997 and acquired citizenship 18 years later. He was wanted by Indian authorities for alleged terrorism and conspiracy to commit murder.
The three arrested Indian nationals, all in their twenties, were charged with first degree murder and conspiracy.
They were accused of being the shooter, driver and lookout in his killing last June.
The Canadian police said they were aware that “others may have played a role” in the murder.
In November, the US Justice Department charged an Indian citizen living in the Czech Republic with plotting a similar assassination attempt on another Sikh separatist leader on American soil.
A Washington Post investigation reported last week that Indian foreign intelligence officials were involved in the plot, a claim rejected by New Delhi.


PCB chief announces $100,000 reward for each player if Pakistan wins T20 World Cup

Updated 05 May 2024
Follow

PCB chief announces $100,000 reward for each player if Pakistan wins T20 World Cup

  • Mohsin Naqvi made the announcement during his visit to Qaddafi Stadium, where the Babar Azam-led side has been practicing
  • The Pakistan side is scheduled to travel to Ireland, England for T20 tours later this month, followed by the World Cup in June

ISLAMABAD: Mohsin Naqvi, chief of the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB), has announced $100,000 reward for each player in case the national side wins the upcoming Twenty20 World Cup, the PCB said on Sunday.
Naqvi made the announcement during his visit to the Qaddafi Stadium in Lahore, where the Babar Azam-led side began the national camp on Saturday, according to the PCB.
He stayed there for two hours and held a detailed discussion with Pakistan players on the strategy of upcoming games.
“This reward is nothing compared to Pakistan’s victory,” Naqvi was quoted as saying.
“I hope you will raise the green flag. Play without any pressure and compete hard. God willing, victory will be yours.”
The Pakistan side is scheduled to travel to Ireland and England for T20 tours later this month.
The tours will help the side prepare for the T20 World Cup scheduled to be held in the United States and the West Indies in June.


IMF says its mission will visit Pakistan this month to discuss new loan

Updated 05 May 2024
Follow

IMF says its mission will visit Pakistan this month to discuss new loan

  • Pakistan last month completed a short-term $3 billion program, which helped stave off sovereign default
  • But the government of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has stressed the need for a fresh, longer-term program

KARACHI: An International Monetary Fund mission is expected to visit Pakistan this month to discuss a new program, the lender said on Sunday ahead of Islamabad beginning its annual budget-making process for the next financial year.
Pakistan last month completed a short-term $3 billion program, which helped stave off sovereign default, but the government of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has stressed the need for a fresh, longer-term program.
“A mission is expected to visit Pakistan in May to discuss the FY25 budget, policies, and reforms under a potential new program for the welfare of all Pakistanis,” the IMF said in an emailed response to Reuters.
Pakistan’s financial year runs from July to June and its budget for fiscal year 2025, the first by Sharif’s new government, has to be presented before June 30.
The IMF did not specify the dates of the visit, nor the size or duration of the program.
“Accelerating reforms now is more important than the size of the program, which will be guided by the package of reform and balance of payments needs,” the IMF statement said.
Pakistan narrowly averted default last summer, and its $350 billion economy has stabilized after the completion of the last IMF program, with inflation coming down to around 17 percent in April from a record high 38 percent last May.
It is still dealing with a high fiscal shortfall and while it has controlled its external account deficit through import control mechanisms, it has come at the expense of stagnating growth, which is expected to be around 2 percent this year compared to negative growth last year.
Earlier, in an interview with Reuters, Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb said the country hoped to agree the contours of a new IMF loan in May.
Pakistan is expected to seek at least $6 billion and request additional financing from the Fund under the Resilience and Sustainability Trust.