donderdag 4 november 2010

Foe(s)

This is Mohamed Bashir (on the right.) He was assigned to our team by the Minister of Information and National Guidance (at our expense of course) as a Security Consultant. This happened after he had sent us an invoice of $3.500 for (unrequired) services rendered. This was - coincidentally of course -  the exact same amount as the quotation for dental work he showed us in April.
 His services included the purchase of a laptop computer, printing four copies of the screenplay at a mere $410 (we bought a laserprinter in Somaliland for $70) and other heavily inflated charges. The Minister insisted he be paid $ 2800 as a compromise. Three weeks ago he asked me to give him a computer. Later he asked Dutch producer Michiel for an addition to his weekly fee because he uses many pens


1 opmerking:

  1. An open letter to my many Somali friends
    2010-11-05

    Dear friends,

    When Abdi Ismael Jama graduated from film school in Amsterdam his dream was to make a film about his childhood in Somalia in the nineteen eighties. Somalis know this period as one of war, death and tragedy which rankles them because they consider it, rightly, to be a climactic period unknown and uncared about in the West.

    I spent a month in Somaliland with committed international feature film-makers Roelof Jan Minneboo and producers Michiel and Guillaume (sorry guys, I remember you well but not your full names) as they used precious Canadian and Dutch film fund money to live out there for three months to make this film “Queleh” with local actors and crew.

    http://roelofjanminneboo.blogspot.com

    This film would have been seen in the West and told the story of that heroic and incredible time and explained to the West why we are hosts to so many of your Somali diaspora now. You would also have had the satisfaction of knowing that your story had been told from your perspective.

    They you, my Somali friends, got greedy. Your Somaliland Minister of Information and National Guidance assigned Mohamed Bashir to the team by the as a Security Consultant who then charged $3,500 for unrequired services. Members of Abdi Ismael Jama's clan threatened to harm the crew and equipment if they didn't pay them 30.000euros and $57.500 for Abdi’s half-brother Ibrahim a.k.a. Fakte because, in part, “this film is for black people”.

    Such payments are and never were possible. The crew’s fixer was attacked and the ministry decided filming was not possible “for security reasons”. The film is cancelled, abandoned and your story will not be told. The West will continue to only know of your country as inhabited by pirates, warlords and gangsters – Now it will add greed to that list.

    I do not want to think this of so many Somali friends who I know to have integrity and honour. Why, good decent Somalis, do you allow others to treat your friends this way?


    Bill Brookman
    The Bill Brookman Foundation

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