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2007-03-21lkjlkj

Frontline Video Training

Practical courses teaching all the skills you need to work as a video journalist

FRONTLINE FIXER'S FUND

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In response to the murder of Ajmal Naqshbandi in Afghanistan we have started a fund for the families of fixers killed or injured while working in international media. 100% of the money currently collected will go to Ajmal's family.

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FRONTLINE CLUB MERCHANDISE

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Frontline Club organic cotton T-Shirts, mugs and notebooks

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Click here to read the Frontline blogs ++

Latest Articles

Remembering the fallen

Robert Fox, 22 Jun 2008

To those who paid the ultimate price for their journalism

The dedication of Jaume Plensa’s giant glass vase ‘Breathing’ on the roof of the BBC at Portland Place as a memorial to all who have fallen in the cause of news and reporting  was moving, fitting and strangely remote. more++

From Forgotten Frontlines

Nancy Durham, 21 Jun 2008

As the Frontline Club's "Forgotten" season gears up, Nancy Durham highlights three memorable documen

Remember when Nagorno-Karabakh topped the news? Two decades ago it became the war to report. For a while we all knew how to say and even spell the name of the disputed territory fought over by Armenia and Azerbaijan. more++
  • When hope turns to fear: Hunger, death and fear stalk the streets of Zimbabwe as the election crisis continues. - Catherine Philp
  • Rough Justice: The tale of the journalism student and the Afghan warlord. One sentenced to death, the other remains - Kim Sengupta, Kabul
  • Africa's Dark Heart: An unnavigable river, barbarous treatment of the natives by Belgian colonists and despotic rule have - Tim Butcher
  • Congolese Cliches: Victorian era cliches about Africa are all-too-often the mainstay for reporters and writers - Fred Robarts
  • Far from over for FARC: Despite the killing of two top leaders, the Colombian revolutionary movement is still going strong - Phil Rees

tools and tips

Twitter's quicker

Graham Holliday, 21 May 2008

From China to Exeter the micro-blogging tool broke the news ahead of the mainstream media.

“Just heard a big blast near badi chowpak. Donno what it was.”
Not much of a quote, but it was enough to get the story out. Sandil Srinivasan, or 2s as he is known on the microblogging service Twitter, was in Jaipur on 13 May when the first of a series of nine synchronized bombs exploded in the capital city of the northern Indian  state of  Rajasthan. more++

Citizen Cameramen

Graham Holliday, 20 Apr 2008

Cheaper cameras and the power of the internet is driving a revolution in the world of video-journali

By the time the members of the original Frontline TV agency hit Grozny in the mid-90s to report on the Chechen war, it became clear that the market for pictures and video was changing. more++

Kitbag: John Coghill

John Coghill, 01 Jun 2007

Zimababwe and Uganda

John Coghill started the Radios for Africa charity in 2003 that distributes Freeplay Lifeline wind-up/solar-powered radios to Africa’s rural poor and has recently started operations in Northern Uganda. more++

inside out

Inside Out - January 2008

John Owen, 19 Dec 2007

When we began recruiting members to the Frontline Club, we were often told that it would never work. After all, the sceptics said, why would you want to become part of a club that catered to war journalists and ex-hacks who would bore you with their tales of near death experiences? more++

Inside Out - November 07

John Owen, 19 Nov 2007

One of the most important debates in journalism is far from over at the Frontline Club. It’s about whether the war in Iraq and the dangerous conflicts in Somalia and Gaza and elsewhere have made it nearly impossible for correspondents and news teams working for “western” news media to do their jobs. more++

Inside Out - October 07

John Owen, 19 Sep 2007

There’s something startling about passing by the most hallowed Serbian monument in Kosovo en route to a bold new journalism school in Kosovo. more++

reviews

Palestine Inside Out: An Everyday Occupation

Najwa Najjar, 19 Jun 2008

Book by Saree Makdisi

How do you review a book that articulates what your life under occupation is like so honestly and clearly that you are left feeling shocked and angry? To an outside world that sees only the issues of “peace” and “terrorism,” occupation loses its significance and becomes a mere abstraction. more++

My Grandmother: A Memoir

Hugh Pope, 19 Jun 2008

Book by Fethiye Çetin Introduction by Maureen Freely

While a young girl, Turkish lawyer Fethiye Çetin adored her grandmother, a Muslim matriarch named Seher. Then she learned that Seher was in fact Haranuş, an Armenian Christian. more++

The Man Who Pushed America to War: The Extraordinary Life, Adventures and Obsessions of Ahmad Chalabi

Ed Harriman, 19 May 2008

Book by Aram Roston

Read this. It’s sober, well written and ruthlessly forensic about Ahmad Chalabi’s business affairs and propaganda operations. more++

new media

AP vs. Bloggers

Graham Holliday, 22 Jun 2008

The Associated Press riled bloggers in June by asking them to pay for quotes lifted from its reports

As freelance word rates go, $2.50 per word isn’t bad. It’s what you might expect from some of the higher end magazines in the US. However, it might not be what you expect the Associated Press (AP) to charge bloggers for quoting AP material. more++

Reporting on the forbidden

Graham Holliday, 19 Mar 2008

RSS feeds and news aggregators are powerful new tools that offer journalists a way around news black

When Georg Blume of Germany and Kristin Kupfer of Austria left from Lhasa train station in the early hours of Thursday March 20 they were the last two foreign journalists to leave Tibet after being forced out by the Chinese authorities. more++

Public or Private?

Graham Holliday, 19 Feb 2008

Social networking sites have brought new opportunities for journalists, and new problems

Social networking sites like Facebook and Bebo are awash with video and pictures uploaded by the general public.
News organisations are grappling with what they can and can’t use from the sites, but there is no agreed standard and recent months have seen them make a litany of mistakes. more++

Event Calendar

Aug 2008
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4th August

Forgotten Season: Screening - Welcome to Hebron

Filmed during more than three years on location, Welcome to Hebron focuses on the life of determined 17 year-old Leila Sarsour and dispels western stereotypes, which often portray Arab women as weak and victimised.

13 Norfolk Place, London, W2 1QJ  

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6th August

Forgotten Season: Screening - Bolivia: Looking for the Revolution

Director Rodrigo Vazquez’ film Looking for the Revolution runs between 2001 and 2007 in search of the socialist revolution that was abruptly halted with the murder of Che Guevara in 1967, leaving the indigenous peoples’ dreams of freedom in tatters and forgotten by the outside world.

13 Norfolk Place, London, W2 1QJ

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8th August

Forgotten Season: Premiere Screening - The Path of Most Resistance

FIRST PUBLIC SCREENING: Fighting war is a grim business and with major operations ongoing in Afghanistan and Iraq, the US Army isn't keen to lose any of its recruits. But what happens when a soldier decides they can no longer fight? The Path of Most Resistance tackles the subject of conscientious objection by following two servicemen who applied for objector status. Only one was successful.

13 Norfolk Place, London, W2 1QJ

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11th August

Forgotten Season: Screening - My Daughter The Terrorist - FULLY BOOKED

What makes anyone want to blow themselves up for a cause? In this intimate and personal portrait we join two young female elite soldiers trained for the ultimate mission. We share their childhood experiences, their dreams and their families’ loss. Left behind are the mothers and a population still coming to grips with life under a conflict largely overlooked by the rest of the world.                                              

13 Norfolk Place, London, W2 1QJ

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13th August

Forgotten Season: Screening - A Story of People in War and Peace

A Story of People in War and Peace is an eloquent and emotional film about coping with war and its consequences, seen from the perspective of its participants. The backdrop is the Nagorno Karabakh conflict - a vicious turfwar between Armenia and Azerbaijan that attracted some attention in the West before it was swiftly forgotten amidst the collapse of communism in Russia.

13 Norfolk Place, London, W2 1QJ

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15th August

Forgotten Season: Screening - Andijan: A Massacre Foretold, Forgiven, Forgotten

We knew he was a bastard, with 10,000 political prisoners and opponents being boiled to death.  But he was our bastard - a close partner in the War on Terror. Then he massacred 1.000 peaceful demonstrators.  We had never told him he couldn't and hardly slapped his wrist when he did.  Doesn't that make us responsible?Andijan: A Massacre Foretold, Forgiven, Forgotten is a single narrative, investigative report into the relationship between the West and Uzbekistan, one of the US’ key allies in the War on Terror. The relationship was called into question when Uzbek troops fired on a crowd of peaceful demonstrators in the Eastern town of Andijan and began to cover the incident up.

13 Norfolk Place, London, W2 1QJ  

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18th August

Forgotten Season: Screening - Deserted: The Story of a Forgotten People - Western Sahara

Deserted is a series of short films based on different encounters with the forgotten Saharawi people of Western Sahara – a territory in north-west Africa that is subject of a decades long dispute between Morocco and the Algerian backed Polisario Front.

13 Norfolk Place, London, W2 1QJ

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20th August

Forgotten Season: Screening - The Other Side of the Country

“What do you do when war engulfs you and your government says there is no war?”Uganda is the setting and the population is the battleground in Catherine Hebert’s carefully conceived film, which shows what it means to live through a war carried out by rebels and played down and drawn out by a complicit government.

13 Norfolk Place, London, W2 1QJ

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22nd August

Forgotten Season: Screening - Juarez, City of Dreams

Situated across the Rio Grande from the US city of El Paso, Texas, Ciudad Juarez is one of the largest border towns on earth with one million desperately poor and maligned inhabitants. Documentary filmmaker Alex Tweddle and cameraman James Buck travel through the city to find out why people flock to the city and what life is like for those living in one of Mexico’s most violent and unstable cities.

13 Norfolk Place, London, W2 1QJ

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Event News

2007-04-04

Documentaries wanted

For the autumn and beyond Frontline is looking for documentaries to include in its screening programme. If you are a filmmaker or journalist and would like to submit a film for our programme please contact Phil Brown: phil.brown@frontlineclub.com

Forthcoming Events

Wed 20 Aug 08, 7.30pm - £8.00

Forgotten Season: Screening - The Other Side of the Country

Fri 22 Aug 08, 7.30pm - £8.00

Forgotten Season: Screening - Juarez, City of Dreams

Tue 02 Sep 08, 7.30pm - £10.00

Media Talk: Understanding Somalia

Wed 03 Sep 08, 7.30pm - £8.00

Somalia Season Screening: The Warlords Next Door?

Fri 05 Sep 08, 7.30pm - £10.00

In the Picture with Jehad Nga: Somalia through a lens

Mon 08 Sep 08, 7.30pm - £8.00

Somalia Season Screening: Lost Boys

Tue 09 Sep 08, 7.30pm - £10.00

Insight: Somaliland - Getting it Right in Africa

Thu 11 Sep 08, 7.30pm - £10.00

Media Talk: Somalia - War within Wars

Wed 17 Sep 08, 7.30pm - £10.00

Insight with Lord Malloch-Brown: An Unlikely Diplomat

Thu 18 Sep 08, 7.30pm - £8.00

Preview Screening: Cambodia Dreams

Events Listings

Events Podcast