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MUMBAI:
The Why Democracy? season is a multimedia event exploring
the state of democracy in the world today with the BBC
at its heart.
From
next month, the season will run globally on TV, radio and online,
on over 40 broadcasters, in over 200 countries and territories
a potential audience of 300 million people.
In
the UK, BBC Two, BBC Four, BBC World, BBC Parliament, BBC Radio
4 and BBC World Service will all run programming dedicated to
the idea of democracy.
Central
to the season are ten documentaries, made by filmmakers from around
the world, taking a wide-ranging and in-depth look at the nature
of democracy. Subjects include US torture in Afghanistan, the
election of a class monitor in a Chinese primary school, Che Guevara
and the Danish cartoons controversy.
Why
Democracy? has teamed up with Metro Newspapers worldwide,
and The Observer in the UK, to ask national leaders, celebrities
and everyday people to answer ten questions about democracy. Their
answers will appear online, in the press and in a series of short
films. The same questions will be part of a global opinion poll.
And
people all over the world can join in the discussion on the web.
A global film premiere on MySpace.com will launch the online debate.
whydemocracy.net will host discussion forums, chat rooms, educational
resources and interviews with key figures who have had a direct
hand in shaping democracy.
The
ten films in the season include:
Please
Vote For Me: Weijun
Chen's comic but profound film charts the election of the class
monitor in a Chinese school. At first all goes well, but soon
the manipulation and dirty tricks start, posing the question of
whether democracy could ever exist without them.
Looking
For The Revolution: Here Rodrigo Vazquez travels to Bolivia
to see whether the idea of a revolution started by Che Guevara
40 years ago is still alive today. Evo Morales seems to be trying
to keep revolution on the agenda, but others wonder whether it
can ever actually happen.
Taxi
To The Dark Side: Dilawar, a young Afghani taxi driver, was
arrested and tortured to death by United States forces in Bagram.
Oscar-nominated director Alex Gibney provides a forensic account
of how such abuses became possible, and finds a trail leading
to the door of the White House.
Bloody
Cartoons: Life
and livelihood were at stake when a small Danish newspaper chose
to print a selection of cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad.
Karsten Kjaer looks at the events that followed and travels the
world to question the protesters and explore their motivations.
Could the Muhammad cartoons have affected the future of free speech?
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