RUTV partner LINK TV documents recent North Korean missile launches.
WUST 1120 AM broadcast from Washington DC featuring interview with filmmaker Chris Flaherty and journalist David Calleja of the Foreign Policy Journal.. They discuss Flaherty's upcoming documentary film, Migration of Beauty and the current political situation in Ethiopia.
In June and November 2005 Ethiopian security forces called Agazi militia gunned down peaceful protesters in the street of Addis Ababa killing nearly 200 civilians. This clip is in honoring and remembering of these victims and all political prisoners languishing in Kaliti, Ethiopia.
An Ethiopian rebel group has warned international oil companies against exploring in a region of the nation where the rebels attacked a Chinese-run field in 2007 killing 74 people. The Ogaden National Liberation Front -- whose hundreds of fighters seek autonomy for the ethnically Somali Ogaden region -- say oil firms have cleared some 1,600 square kilometers, displacing locals and destroying vegetation.
Self Help Africa is an international development agency involved in promoting and implementing projects which enable African people to produce enough food, and earn an income. The organisation works in nine African countries.
An account of Self Help Africa's programme work in Uganda, where the lives of thousands or rural families have been transformed by the application of simple, sustainable solutions to combat poverty and improve household incomes.
Musician Dudu Manhenga grew up in a violent family. For years after she married, Dudu wouldn't let her husband touch her neck because it brought back nightmares of her father choking her. Today, as singer in popular band Color Blu, she sings about violence and bad relationships, and how women can overcome them.
In 2008, political violence erupted throughout Zimbabwe as a result of highly contested national elections. Between May and July alone, local organizations estimate that state-sanctioned groups abducted, raped, tortured, and beat over 2,000 women and girls due to their political affiliations.
2008 was marked by violence and instability in Zimbabwe as highly-contested elections between longtime president Robert Mugabe and opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai ignited a wave of political violence and collapsed the country's economy and public services. Particularly affected by the violence were thousands of Zimbabwean women, who were raped, tortured, and beaten without consequence.
Hope and change are happening. The girls of Mudzini Kwetu and One Home Many Hopes want to let you know.
Media Focus on Africa Foundation and FilmAid International have teamed up in Kenya to host a series of media workshops and public screenings to quell the residual anger, fear and mistrust after the violence that erupted in the country post 2007 presidential election.
Bill Drayton is the founder of Ashoka and gave the burgeoning field of social entrepreneurship its name. He explains what it means to be a social entrepreneur; he describes how social entrepreneurs are transforming how almost everything works in modern society, and identifies ways in which everyone can be a changemaker.
Ashoka's Full Economic Citizenship Initiative is collaborating with Ashoka Fellows and leading tile manufacturing company Colceramica to expand access to affordable home improvement products in Colombia.
A preview of Muhammad Yunus: Banker to the Poor - one of a series of 16 DVDs created by Ashoka's Global Academy for Social Entrepreneurship. Dr. Yunus, who was awarded the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize, describes his three-decade-long effort to extend micro-credit.
RUTV profiles Rita Henley Jensen and Women's E News on reproductive health and Uganda in honor of breast cancer awareness month.
Tala Dowlatshahi reports on maternal health care programmes in Uganda.
Tove Gerhardsen covers the European perspective on North Korea's recent missile launches.
Video presented at the Cato Institute's forum Venezuela's Assault on Freedom of the Press and Other Liberties on July 30th, 2009.
Actor and filmmaker Sean Penn talks with Raul Castro about Obama, Guantanamo and the Pentagon; and with Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez on human rights in his country and the next US administration.
Clinton Global Initiative Opening Ceremony featuring President Clinton, President Obama, and Matt Damon.
RUTV partner LINK (Liberty in North Korea) GLOBAL gives us an inside look at at Joseph, a North Korean who dives into the game of soccer as an escape from a life of confinement and poverty.
RUTV Europe Correspondent interviews with Danish filmmaker Mads Brugger on his comedy troupe's recent visit to the country.
Current Television's Christof Putzel investigates the increased number of attacks by Neo-Nazi groups on Africans and immigrants inside Moscow.
RUTV partners the Bureau for International Reporting (BIR) and the Pulitzer Center look into life in Russia from a Muslim perspective.
Human Rights Watch investigates abuses of migrant construction workers inside Russia.
The BIR travels to the Democratic Republic of the Congo to examine the United Nations' biggest peacekeeping operation in the world, MONUC.
Produced by the Pulitzer Center, Congo's Bloody Coltan is a quick glimpse at coltan's role in Congo's civil war. It was featured on Foreign Exchange with Fareed Zakaria.
Produced in association with HBO Documentary Films and the Fledgling Fund, features interviews with activists, peace keepers, physicians, and even -- chillingly --the indifferent rapists who are soldiers of the Congolese Army. A profoundly disturbing portrayal of the ways that violence against women is used as a weapon of war, this powerful film also provides inspiring examples of resiliency, resistance, courage and grace. Courtesy of Women Make Movies, www.wmm.com.
Journalist Brad Will murdered on the streets of Oaxaca as he films teacher strikes.
Drug violence has reemerged in Tijuana, along Mexico's northern border with the United States, as authorities discovered three beheaded victims, some 500 meters from the fence that separates Mexico from the U.S.
Mexican drug war is a de facto turf war between rival drug cartels and government forces. As cartels get dismantled or left without leaders violent power struggles erupt over who takes their place. At present, these powerfully organized crime syndicates have aligned themselves into 2 blocks led by Gulf Cartel and Sinaloa Cartel. These two blocks are involved in massive, violent turf wars currently being carried out throughout Mexico with the help of their own private army, for eg. Los Zetas.
BBC Four's Storyville looks at the plight of ordinary women in the Islamic Republic of Iran - those who are prostitutes, drug addicts, become 'Sighe' for wealthy men, those who are forced to sell their children - and how such activities are reconciled with, and often exacerbated by, Iran's strict Islamic law and image.
A huge amount of human trafficking that is taking place from Iran to foreign countries.
Five Minutes of Heaven, a film that tracks the lives of two men from the same town but different sides of the Irish political divide, is unlike any other on this subject. One man, Alistair, is a killer; the other, Joe, is the brother of the man he killed. One feels he dare not ask for forgiveness; the other feels incapable of giving it.
Love Music Hate Racism gets local musicians to talk about Nazism in schools and the dangers of the British National Party (BNP).
Couscous Global visits Cityvarsity school in Johannesburg, South Africa to ask students to define racism in their daily lives
RUTV partner DNR Films presents In These Sour Times which chronicles religious racism after 9/11 and 7/7 in the United Kingdom.
Peruvian Indigenous Community expresses outrage at government violation of land rights
RUTV Africa correspondent Mwenya Mukuka interviews opposition leader Guy Scott on government corruption in his country.
RUTV's Omoyele Sowore heads to Ghana for Sahara Television and picks up some street reactions on the eve of Obama's visit.
Women for Women International is working with Afghan women to turn them from victim to survivor.
RUTV Middle East Correspondent Marzieh Vafamehr on the Afghan border with Iran to highlight thoughts on new Afghan marriage laws
Tove Gerdhardsen addresses social policy on the new rigid marriage law imposed in Afghanistan by President Hamid Karzai.
The Afghan refugee experience inside Iran. Produced by RUTV partners Couscous Global.
United4Iran.org organizes global solidarity event on July 25th to condemn the government's recent actions. Rallies will be worldwide — from New York to Lahore, Vienna to Toronto.
Ghana and the exploitation of oil resources. RUTV Africa/Political Analyst Omoyele Sowore gives us the civil society perpective.
Dozens of supporters gather in front of the United Nations in New York to condemn attacks on civilian protesters following the Presidential elections in Iran.
What do citizens in your country think about the international criminal court's decision to issue a warrant for the arrest of Sudanese President Al-Bashir?
Asia Director for Human Rights Watch says not enough is being done to combat human rights violations on the population in the previously Tamil held areas.
Nicolas Landi, Youth Correspondent, shares interviews from NAPA TV in Peru, where students talk about recent attacks on natives.
Tala Dowlatshahi interviews Steve Leeper, Chairman of the HPCF at the United Nations in New York.
An interview with the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) manager in Zambia underscores a need for stronger climate change initiatives.
RUTV correspondents ask comedians and students their thoughts on who's to blame for the collapsed global economy.
© Reporters Uncensored 2009