Thursday, 10 October 2013

Breaking! Boko Haram Movie Banned

A vicious would-be suicide bomber is heading for Nigeria’s vast metropolis of Lagos and only a down-on-her-luck prostitute can stop a horrific attack. This ominous fiction is part of “Boko Haram”, a new movie by Ghanaian-Nigeria director Pascal Amanfo. The film has been banned by censors in Ghana and shunned by cinema owners in Nigeria.

A movie inspired by the very real and brutal Islamist group active in Nigeria was potentially so inflammatory that it was released in the country with the title “Nation Under Siege” to avoid a backlash.

“Boko Haram”, loosely translated, means “Western education is forbidden” and the group has said it is fighting to impose a strict Islamic state in mainly Muslim northern Nigeria.

Movie director admits that his film raises uncomfortable questions about the Boko Haram conflict, which has left thousands dead in northern Nigeria since 2009

“I want to provoke people to see these things,” he said.

However, he didn't expect that it would be banned. For weeks after its March release, the film made brisk sales in Accra, where DVDs are sold on the street from shipping container store fronts or off makeshift wooden shelves for a couple of dollars.

But when the Ghanaian film control board found out about “Boko Haram”, it order that all the promotional posters be torn down stating that the film was released without authorization. The police swooped down on vendors at a busy bus station in the capital and confiscated the copies they were selling.

Movie producer was also arrested and only freed after paying a 2,000 cedi ($920, 680 euro) fine.

“We would not allow a film with the title ‘Boko Haram’ to be released in Ghana,” said Ken Addy of the Ghana Cinematographic Exhibition Board of Control.

“We realised this was a film we had to be careful about so as not to antagonise a neighbouring country.”

Some episodes depict defenceless villagers being gunned down and children murdered by jihadist gunmen, evoking the style of attack Boko Haram has used during its uprising.

Some aspects of the plot are inspired by popular but unsubstantiated conspiracy theories, including claims that senior Nigerian politicians are behind the bloodshed. In one of the moments in the film, an extremist discusses a safe house in Lagos financed by a lawmaker sympathetic to Boko Haram.

Nigeria’s President Goodluck Jonathan said last year he believed Boko Haram backers were in his government, but later distanced himself from that remark. No politician or official has ever been concretely tied to the insurgency.

The Ghana film board chief Addy declined to comment on its content beyond saying that “Boko Haram” would not get approval for sale in Ghana without a name change and the removal of certain gruesome scenes.

Mustapha Adams, head of Ghana’s Film Distributors Association, speculated that some were concerned the film sought to arouse sympathy for Boko Haram, or even that finance had potentially been raised among supporters of the extremist group.

He considered the response to “Boko Haram” by Ghanaian officials as an overreaction, saying: “What is there to hide?”

In Nigeria, the film was released on DVD but Amanfo said many cinema owners recoiled when approached about screening the movie, which cost roughly $18,000 to make.

One theatre manager in the capital Abuja said he could not imagine showing it in the city where Boko Haram blew up a United Nations building in 2011, killing at least 25 people.

Nollywood is the third largest in the world, releasing hundreds of typically low-budget films each year, sometimes involving witchcraft or divine intervention with a little sexual promiscuity thrown in.

Ghana’s much smaller industry (“Ghollywood”) generally imitates the Nollywood formula, which has generated films with massive popularity across Africa, even if their reach outside the continent has been limited.

But some of the region’s directors have been attempting to change both style and themes, seeking to explore contemporary issues like Islamic extremism or political corruption while moving away from traditional stories driven by magic and mysticism.

“Boko Haram” — in which a radical Islamist bomber has a life-altering conversation with a commercial sex worker — may not be a study in gritty realism.

But Amanfo added that the official reaction reaction has been frustrating because he believed his film was targeted simply for trying to achieve a filmmaker’s core mission: to probe current and relevant issues.

“If we can’t tell the stories of our society then we have failed as artists.”

Source: Vanguard

 
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