new york times Archives - WITNESS https://www.witness.org/tag/new-york-times/ Human Rights Video Fri, 15 Apr 2016 17:27:37 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 76151064 One year later: Brazilian partners reflect on the importance of video cameras when a young boy was killed https://www.witness.org/one-year-later-brazilian-partners-reflect-on-the-importance-of-video-cameras-when-a-young-boy-was-killed/ Fri, 15 Apr 2016 17:01:18 +0000 https://www.witness.org/?p=2064802

April 2, 2016 marked one year since the devastating murder of a 10-year-old boy named Eduardo by Police in Rio de Janiero. Eduardo was gunned down while playing on his front porch— the police claimed they thought the bright white cell phone he held in his hand was a gun.

Our Brazilian partners, media collective Coletivo Papo Reto, were amongst the first on the scene in order to capture what happened, take testimony from witnesses, and document the crime scene to ensure that it wasn’t tampered with by police officers. To mark the one year anniversary of this tragedy that sparked a blaze of outrage and protest across the community — a collection of neighboring  favelas called Complexo de Alemão — a WITNESS Team in Brazil compiled this video of  Papo Reto’s reflections on the importance of video in the aftermath of Eduardo’s murder.

https://youtu.be/kAOt3R9l-QY&w=640&h=480

Police violence is a systemic issue in Brazil, almost exclusively targeting young, black men from favela communities and often with impunity. No one has yet been held accountable for Eduardo’s death.

From Amnesty International:

“Of the 56,000 homicides in Brazil every year, 30,000 are young people aged 15 to 29.That means that, at this very moment, a young person is most likely being killed in Brazil. By the time you go to bed, 82 will have died today. It’s like a small airplane full of young people crashing every two days, with no survivors. This would be shocking enough by itself, but it’s even more scandalous that 77 per cent of these young people are black.”

Check out this post or this New York Times Magazine feature on us to learn more about how we’re working to expose police violence in Brazil. We also co-authored to a report with partner organization Article 19 about how video can be better used for justice and accountability in Brazil. And here you can find a host of resources in Portuguese.

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Police Violence, Video as Evidence and Brazil https://www.witness.org/police-violence-video-as-evidence-and-brazil/ Thu, 19 Feb 2015 17:04:24 +0000 https://www.witness.org/?p=946394 We are thrilled to announce that WITNESS’ work in Brazil and our groundbreaking video as evidence initiative are featured in a New York Times article about media activists operating in the country’s favelas.

Called “The Media Doesn’t Care What Happens Here,” the story follows WITNESS partners and allies as they document police violence in the country.

In particular, journalist Matthew Shaer introduces Raull, the co-founder of a media collective in Rio de Janeiro. Our Senior Program Manager Priscila Neri has worked with Raull – and many activists like him – in an effort to document police violence effectively so that their video can strengthen calls for justice.

It is no small task. Activists estimate that police violence in Brazil kills thousands each year and marginalized favela communities are the most affected.

Important though for these Brazilian activists is that the country’s media largely ignores the epidemic. Says Raull in the article:

“Four or five bodies show up, six bodies, maybe it makes the news. One body? Never. The media doesn’t care what happens here. They’d rather not think about it.”

Their solution has been to film and document what traditional media has not covered: ongoing and systemic police violence in the favelas.

WITNESS’ collaboration with media groups like Raull’s has included efforts to turn footage taken on the frontlines of human rights abuse into justice, a central component of our video as evidence initiative.

Via The New York Times:

[WITNESS] believed that the footage shot by local residents in the world’s most dangerous places could be used not just to draw attention to acts of violence but also to put the responsible parties in prison. It was a novel vision for how criminal justice could evolve in the era of the smartphone, and the young members of [the media activist group] Papo Reto seemed like the perfect partners.

It is not only in Brazil that activists and lawyers are searching for ways to turn footage taken on the frontlines of human rights abuse into justice. With cameras in the hands of millions of people worldwide, more light is shining on abuses than ever before.

However, while citizen video often provides helpful clues about what took place and who might be responsible, the footage rarely meets the requirements for evidence in a court of law. As Kelly Matheson, our Senior Attorney and Video as Evidence Program Manager explains:

Evidentiary work requires a more detached eye. “It’s instinctual to shoot that puddle of blood or the body lying on the ground,” Matheson [tells The Times]. “It’s not instinctual to turn around and get a badge number or the location of a communications tower. If you’re strictly a media activist, you’re not going to show the world a communications tower. It’s not going to make the news. It’s not going to mobilize anyone. But from a legal sense, you need those details.”

You can read the article here — and please share with your networks so everyone, everywhere begins to understand how to use video for justice.

Also, congratulations to the New York Times Magazine for the redesign of both their print and digital editions. We’re so happy to be included in their launch issue.

More Brazil, More Video as Evidence

Learn about tools and guidance we’re developing to help activists ensure that their footage can serve as evidence in criminal and civil justice processes.

Read WITNESS Executive Director Yvette Alberdingk Thijm’s thoughts in the Huffington Post on video as evidence

Read what WITNESS Co-founder Peter Gabriel has to say about the potential power of video evidence.

Learn more about WITNESS’ work in Brazil.

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New York Times talks to Sam Gregory about YouTube's New Faceblurring Tool https://www.witness.org/new-york-times-talks-to-sam-gregory-about-youtubes-new-faceblurring-tool/ https://www.witness.org/new-york-times-talks-to-sam-gregory-about-youtubes-new-faceblurring-tool/#respond Fri, 20 Jul 2012 18:58:00 +0000 http://w.witness.org/?p=913 Part of WITNESS’ Systems Change work includes advising technology companies on how human rights defenders use their platforms. This includes advising them on features they could implement to better protect activists. That said, we’re excited that YouTube has included the ability to blur faces in its online editing suite.

Giving activists the ability to maintain the anonymity is vital to the safety and security concerns of those speaking out against injustices around the world.

Via The New York Times:

Sam Gregory, program director for Witness.org, the leading human rights video advocacy and training organization, praised the move. Witness.org recently began collaborating with YouTube on a new human rights channel.

Mr. Gregory has been trying to raise awareness among dissidents and operators of social media sites about the importance of anonymity for activists when speaking out can put them at risk of retaliation.

In recent years, Mr. Gregory said, government officials in places like Myanmar, Iran and Syria have used videos of protests to identify dissidents. “There have been clear attempts to use citizen-shot footage to target people and punish them for speaking out against the regime,” Mr. Gregory said.

But Mr. Gregory said the tool would help more people than the activists involved in protests. He said that it would also protect the identity of people who want to use video to speak out about subjects like sexual assault and abuse.

For more on YouTube’s new faceblurring tool and what it means to the human rights community, visit The New York Times.

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