Louise Arbour and the Battle for Human Rights
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- English
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- 2007-03-04 22:06 GMT
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******************************************************************************* CBC - Doc Zone In The Crossfire: Louise Arbour and the Battle for Human Rights ******************************************************************************* ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- General Information ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Type.................: documentary More Information.....: (none) Part Size............: 15,000,000 bytes Number of Parts......: 49 Archive Format.......: RAR Part Recovery Method.: PAR2 PAR2 Blocks Provided.: 192 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Technical Information ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Source...............: NTSC CABLE AVI Size.............: 721,416,192 bytes Duration.............: 00:44:31 FPS..................: 29.97 Video Codec..........: XviD Codec DCT......: H263 QPel...........: No GMC............: No Video Bitrate........: 2000 (ABR) Video Resolution.....: 640x464 Video Aspect Ratio...: 1.379 Audio Format.........: 0x0055(MP3, ISO) MPEG-1 Layer 3 Audio Encoder........: LAME 3.92 Bitrate..............: 128kbits/sec (CBR) Hz...................: 48000 Channels.............: Stereo Captured by..........: festering leper ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Description ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Louise Arbour has what her predecessor called "the job from hell." She is the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights at a time when jihad and æthe war against terror' dominate world affairs and erode human rights. Arbour is a Canadian who, as UN's War Crimes Prosecutor for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda, indicted Slobodan Milosevic. She served four years on Canada's Supreme Court before Kofi Annan gave her another platform for her activism and strong views of human rights. Our film catches up with Arbour one year into her new job. The genocide in Darfur rages on. In Congo, Uzbekistan, Chechnya and Colombia, warlords and tyrants persecute and plunder. The UN embodies humanity's most noble sentiments but when the politics get complex, as in Darfur, the world body is paralyzed, its legitimacy in question. In the meantime, innocent civilians, mainly women and children, are deprived of their dignity and of their most fundamental rights. Arbour's experience as War Crimes Prosecutor has given her a reputation for toughness. Her new job description is more complex and far-reaching. As Arbour tries to reform her office and the UN while herself under attack, the crisis in Darfur deepens and the world demands action. Arbour is caught in the crossfire between the best of our human intentions and the ugly reality of big-power politics. Her tenacity and strong moral sense, rooted in her Canadian heritage and strengthened by her previous work assignments, give us hope. This film follows Arbour as she reflects, develops her strategies and organizes her troops and travels to places of crisis. The film also allows viewers to experience from within the step-by-step process of her battle for human rights. This vigorous and determined woman challenges each and every one of us with questions on how to confront today's human rights crises with compassion and determination.