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Up-and-coming
filmmaker Mohammed Naqvi was one of the recipients of the inaugural
Television Academy Honors this year for his 2006 documentary Shame,
which tackled the issue of violence against women in Pakistan, more
specifically the Mukhtaran Mai case. Produced for the Showtime cable
network, Shame, along with eight other television programmes, was
picked ahead of 200 other entries. In addition to being featured
at the Toronto International Fim Festival, the International Documentary
Festival Amsterdam and the Tribeca Film Festival, Shame has won
awards at the Durban Film Festival and the Full Frame Documentary
Festival last year. Naqvi has also been selected as one of the members
of the American Film Institute Project for international directors.
Using
the Mukhtaran Mai case as an example, Naqvi's documentary points
out the urgent need to empower women in third world countries so
that they can fight for their own rights. Alongside, it pays homage
to Mukhtaran Mai, who fought against the system to receive justice.
Although
Naqvi is only 29 years old, Shame is not his first film project.
He was a producer for the critically acclaimed film Big River and
directed a short, Hide, in 2004.
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