Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /home/dh_ueu9qi/beta.frontlineclub.com/wp-content/themes/frontline3.6/functions.php:1) in /home/dh_ueu9qi/beta.frontlineclub.com/wp-includes/feed-rss2.php on line 8
empire – Frontline Club http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com Championing Independent Journalism Fri, 05 Apr 2019 18:01:05 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 The Forgotten Heroes of Empire: Screening + Q&A http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/the-forgotten-heroes-of-empire-screening-qa/ http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/the-forgotten-heroes-of-empire-screening-qa/#respond Thu, 21 Mar 2019 12:37:32 +0000 http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/?p=64592 There is much debate over how Britain’s colonial past in Africa is remembered. Through the constantly shifting kaleidoscope of history, some momentous stories get quietly left behind. The Forgotten Heroes of Empire by Jack Losh and Alessandro Pavone, unearths an unfinished – and overlooked – chapter of that past. Join the filmmakers for a screening + Q&A with foreign correspondent Christina Lamb and a panel of experts to take a deeper look behind a disquieting story that is far from over. 

During World War Two, Britain mobilised a huge, now-forgotten, army of African soldiers to fight against the Axis powers in battlefields across Africa, Asia and the Middle East. But when peace came in 1945, the British Empire betrayed these men and subjected them to systematic discrimination.

The Forgotten Heroes of Empire delves into this shameful episode and explores how such colonial-era disregard reverberates to this day. Amazingly, the filmmakers managed to track down some of the last surviving veterans in remote parts of the continent, now aged around 100 years old. Though the passing years have whittled down their numbers, the survivors continue to endure great poverty, hardship and alienation, despite having risked their lives for the Allied war effort.

With a cast of compelling characters, including some extraordinary veterans from Kenya and Zambia, this investigation by filmmakers Jack Losh and Alessandro Pavone finally brings this dreadful injustice to light and raises disturbing questions about the UK’s attitude towards its forgotten African heroes. For the first time, damning evidence of such discrimination is unearthed: policies that based pay on skin colour, secret enforced recruitment by press gangs, and illegal regimes of beatings and public floggings.

Since its release, the film’s testimonies and revelations have prompted senior politicians and a former British Army chief to call on the government to make an official apology, to launch an inquiry and to compensate the last surviving veterans before it is too late.

Film running time: 25 minutes, followed by 1hr panel discussion.

Chair

Christina Lamb is one of Britain’s leading foreign correspondents and a bestselling author.  She has reported from most of the world’s hotspots, including numerous conflicts in Africa. She has won major awards, including five times being named Foreign Correspondent of the Year and Europe’s top war reporting prize, the Prix Bayeux. She was made an OBE by the Queen in 2013 and is an honorary fellow of University College, Oxford. She is the author of The Africa House, the story of an extraordinary, colonial-era country estate built in Northern Rhodesia, which features in the film, The Forgotten Heroes of Empire.

 

 

Speakers

Jack Losh is a journalist, photographer and filmmaker with a focus on armed conflict and humanitarian issues. He has reported across the Central African Republic, eastern Ukraine, Iraqi Kurdistan and elsewhere, with work shortlisted at the RTS Television Journalism Awards, the One World Media Awards, Reuters’ Kurt Schork Awards and Frontline Club Awards. Jack has produced documentaries for Al Jazeera and The Guardian, and is regularly published by leading UK and US outlets including The Washington Post, Newsweek, The Telegraph, Granta and The Sunday Times Magazine. In 2018, the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting awarded him a research grant to cover the civil war in CAR.

 

Italian-born Alessandro Pavone has been working as a freelance director of photography and producer in current affairs and documentary programming for the past fifteen years. Based in Kabul and then Dubai from 2011, Pavone has filmed conflicts and humanitarian crises in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, South Sudan and Somalia. Pavone was also part of the PBS NewsHour team to receive the 2017 Overseas Press Club citation (honourable mention) in the Edward R. Murrow Award for their “The Fight for Iraq” series. Beyond his current collaboration with PBS, Ale works regularly for CNN and BBC, and his work has appeared on Al Jazeera, VICE and The New York Times among others. In 2018 he filmed and produced for the PBS NewsHour a series of news feature stories funded by the Pulitzer Center on the migrants’ abuse and the Islamic State resurgence in Libya.

 

Hélène Neveu Kringelbach is an award-winning social anthropologist and a Senior Lecturer in African Studies at UCL. She gained an MSc and a DPhil in Anthropology from the University of Oxford and has carried out fieldwork in Senegal, France and the UK. With teaching interests spanning diasporas, popular culture and migration between Africa and Europe, her research has been awarded the Amaury Talbot Prize in African Anthropology, with a special citation in the De la Torre Bueno Prize, and appeared in books and journals including Africa, African Studies Review, Politique Africaine and Identities.

 

 

Rishika Yadav is a PhD student at the Department of International History, London School of Economics and Political Science. She is currently re-constructing the war experiences of Coloured, Indian, and Malay soldiers from South Africa in the Second World War. Her research aims to challenge the imperialist trajectory of war memory. She completed her undergraduation at Sri Venkateswara College, University of Delhi, and gained her Masters degree in International History from LSE where she was also awarded the Iris Forester Prize for Academic Excellence. She has previously interned at UNESCO MGIEP and the Ministry of External Affairs (Govt. of India), and has worked at the Delhi-based think tank, Centre for Civil Society, frequently contributing to their digital publication ‘Spontaneous Order’.  

]]>
http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/the-forgotten-heroes-of-empire-screening-qa/feed/ 0
“Up in the Air” Disney, 21st Century Fox, Sky News http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/up-in-the-air-disney-21st-century-fox-sky-news/ Tue, 19 Dec 2017 09:21:17 +0000 http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/?p=62043 In December, Walt Disney agreed to buy 21st Century Fox including its huge stake in Sky News from Rupert Murdoch for £39bn. This will massively change the landscape of both British and American media. In light of recent events join our panel in a comparative discussion of the standards and ethics of the British Press 2011 – 2018.

Will recent events change the outcome of 21st Century Fox’s attempted £11.7 billion takeover of Sky News, at present referred to the Competition and Markets Authority for further investigation? The investigation in part must examine Murdoch’s commitment to ethical broadcasting standards.

While the CMA investigates this claim, due to make its decision in March, the next tranche of phone hacking trials continue to go ahead in January 2018. It also begs the question if the Leveson Part 2 Inquiry will ever take place.

The Leveson Inquiry into the press in 2011 / 2012 was split into two parts to avoid jeopardising the criminal investigations. The first half investigated the ethics, practice and culture of of the press. The second trial is set to investigate the phone hacking specifically. During her election campaign, Theresa May bowed to newspaper pressure to scrap the second part of the trial. However this officially has not been done so yet.

Chair

Roy Greenslade is one of Britain’s foremost media teachers. He is a leading commentator and columnist on the media, and currently blogs for The Guardian. As a journalist he rose to the highest levels of management in a career taking in The Sun, the Sunday Times, and culminating in the editorship of the Daily Mirror.

Speakers

Graham Johnson is Head of Investigations at Byline. He is an author and investigative journalist who has contributed to a variety of publications including News of the World, Sunday Mirror, The Observer, Vice magazine, The Guardian and Liverpool Echo. He has been a finalist for Reporter of the Year three times and has covered stories ranging from drug dealing in Britain, people smuggling in Europe, child slavery in India and Pakistan, and war in the Balkans.

 Mark Lewis is an internationally renowned media lawyer who pioneered the phone hacking claims. Mark has represented the Dowler family in the largest ever financial claim, which led to the closure of the News of the World, and undertook the first hacking claim against both News of the World and the Mirror Group. More recently the team has undertaken the Twibel (twitter libel) trial for Jack Monroe v Katie Hopkins.

Alaphia Zoyab is a former TV anchor, now senior campaigner working on Avaaz’s campaign to stop the Murdoch takeover of Sky

]]>
Kleptoscope Film Night: The Spider’s Web http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/kleptoscope-film-night-the-spiders-web/ http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/kleptoscope-film-night-the-spiders-web/#respond Tue, 30 May 2017 10:36:43 +0000 http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/?p=60791

On July 5th the Frontline Club will be screening in collaboration with The Tax Justice Network – Michael Oswald’s and John Christensen’s new film, ‘The Spider’s Web: Britain’s Second Empire’.

The Spider’s Web’ is a documentary film that shows how Britain transformed from a colonial, to a global financial power. At the demise of empire, City of London financial interests created a web of offshore secrecy jurisdictions that captured wealth from across the globe and hid it behind obscure financial structures in a web of offshore islands. Today, up to half of global offshore wealth may be hidden in British offshore jurisdictions and Britain and its offshore jurisdictions are the largest global players in the world of international finance. How did this come about, and what impact does it have on the world today? This is what the Spider’s Web sets out to investigate.

With contributions from leading experts, academics, former insiders and campaigners for social justice, the Spider’s Web reveals how in the world of international finance, corruption and secrecy have prevailed over regulation and transparency, and the UK is right at the heart of this.

Join us post-screening for a panel discussion with some of the creators of the film and leading financial experts.

Chair: Oliver Bullough. Oliver is an award winning investigative journalist and chair of all the Kleptoscope nights at the Frontline Club. Bullough writes extensively for the Guardian on topics of tax evasion, dirty money and money laundering. Before this, Bullough lived in Russia working primarily for Reuters and has written extensively on the country.

Speakers

John Christensen: John is the co-producer of ‘The Spider’s Web’ and Chair of the Tax Justice NetworkHe is a former economic advisor to the government of Jersey. His research in offshore finance has been widely published.

Dr Abby Innes: is the Assistant Professor of political economy at the LSE European Institute. Before her PhD, Dr Innes worked as a political analyst in the Office of the Government, Czechoslovakia; as Assistant to the General Secretary of the Czechoslovak Foreign Ministry and as a researcher for the Policy Studies Institute.

Will Snell: from Tax Justice UK, is a newly launched sister organisation of the Tax Justice Network, but also independent from it. Focused on the UK, it’s just released an analysis of general election political party manifestos from a tax justice perspective http://www.taxjustice.uk/election.html

http://www.taxjustice.uk/election.html

Watch the trailer here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5uM2cdhfAGA

Run Time: 1 hr 19 minutes.

You can get a sneak preview of the film and hear an interview with the director Michael Oswald in the Taxcast, the Tax Justice Network’s monthly podcast: http://www.taxjustice.net/2017/05/24/britains-second-empire-may-2017-tax-justice-network-podcast/

Listen to the Guardian Audio: Offshore in Central London, the curious case of 29 Harley Street, by Oliver Bullough here: https://www.theguardian.com/news/audio/2016/may/06/offshore-in-central-london-the-curious-case-of-29-harley-street

]]>
http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/kleptoscope-film-night-the-spiders-web/feed/ 0