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SYNOPSISFilmmakers Ayala and Fallshaw follow Fetim Sellami, a Saharawi refugee, to North Africa for a reunion with her mother. Mother and child were separated when Sellami was a toddler. But the UN-sponsored reunion reveals a secret which spirals the film into a dark world the filmmakers could never have imagined. The black Saharawis start talking about a forbidden subject…Their enslavement. The filmmakers recount moments of terror when their lives were in danger as well as the extreme hardships in getting the footage across borders. Perhaps most disturbingly, it becomes difficult to distinguish who are the good guys, as the ‘good guys’ turn bad and the ‘bad guys’ appear to do good. The Polisario, the movement running the camp flew Sellami to the Sydney Film Festival to deny being a slave and that slavery exists in the camps. Stolen is a compelling, modern-day, real-life cloak-and-dagger thriller.
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ORIGINS OF STOLENWe were in Mauritania making our first film and a woman approached Violeta. She told her, in Spanish, about the refugee camps where she comes from, just to the north. She'd fled the conflict over Western Sahara to live in the camps governed by the Polisario Liberation Front. She hadn’t seen her family for more than 30 years. Western Sahara had been a Spanish colony. It sparked our curiosity. In September 2006, with the co-operation of the Polisario, we went to the camps to make a film about a family reunion. After 10 days of being introduced by Polisario officials to women who were to take part in a UN Family Reunion Program, we met Fetim. Fetim has a teenage daughter, Leil, who speaks fluent Spanish. Fetim told us about being separated from her mother when she was 3 years old. We felt compelled to tell her story and asked her if she would like us to make a film, Fetim answered ‘I would like that very much’. To watch the video click here
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THE LOCATIONFor 100 years Western Sahara was a Spanish colony. In 1975 when Spain left Morocco took over and half the population fled with the Polisario Liberation Front to refugee camps in the Algerian desert. |
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UN REUNIONSSince 2004, the United Nations High Commission for Refugees has organised family reunions for refugees in the camps and their families from the Western Sahara as part of the Confidence Building Measures organised between Morocco and the Polisario. There are 27,000 names on the UNHCR waiting list. For a family to be reunited it’s akin to wining the lottery. These reunions are carried out by air, there is one flight per week and the reunions only last 5 days. |
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FILMING STOLENAt first, making the film seemed straightforward. We had permission from the Polisario to go to the refugee camps and visas for Algeria. Then, the day we arrived in Algiers, two bombs exploded outside our hotel. The first two trips to the camps went smoothly but when we discovered slavery on the third, everything changed. From the moment the Polisario realised we were filming material they The Australian Embassy in Paris negotiated our release from Algeria; For 18 months it was just the two of us, our little cameras and no back up, with the Polisario and Morocco breathing down our necks. |