A year after Indonesian troops killed more than 270 peaceful demonstrators at the cemetery of Santa Cruz in the Timor-Leste capital of Dili in 1991, news footage secretly shot by a cameraman surfaced in a powerful new film.
The Yorkshire Television documentary, In Cold Blood: The Massacre of East Timor, screened in six countries and later broadcast in other nations, helped change the course of history.
Until then, countries such as Australia and New Zealand – in spite of a New Zealander being killed in the massacre – had been content to close a blind eye to the illegal Indonesian invasion in 1975 and the atrocities committed for a quarter century.
Read More >>: East Timor’s filmmaker Max Stahl tells of the doco that ‘changed everything’
http://pacific.scoop.co.nz/2014/02/east-timors-filmmaker-max-stahl-tells-of-the-doco-that-changed-everything/
The Yorkshire Television documentary, In Cold Blood: The Massacre of East Timor, screened in six countries and later broadcast in other nations, helped change the course of history.
Until then, countries such as Australia and New Zealand – in spite of a New Zealander being killed in the massacre – had been content to close a blind eye to the illegal Indonesian invasion in 1975 and the atrocities committed for a quarter century.
Read More >>: East Timor’s filmmaker Max Stahl tells of the doco that ‘changed everything’
http://pacific.scoop.co.nz/2014/02/east-timors-filmmaker-max-stahl-tells-of-the-doco-that-changed-everything/
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