The Straits Times - Life!, Apr 10, 2008
Six films have been withdrawn from the Singapore International Film Festival
while four have been given the go-ahead for a one-time screening only.
The six withdrawn films are:
# Female Games by local film-maker Kan Lume, about two female models who get
into trouble and fall for each other
# Boy, a gay coming-of-age story by Filipino director Auraeus Solito
# Shahida, a documentary by Israeli Natalie Assouline, about Palestinian women imprisoned for terrorism
# An Extraordinary Study Of Human Degradation by Swede Patrik Eriksson documenting what happens after he gets dumped
# Melancholia by renowned Filipino director Lav Diaz, which examines the consequences of political oppression in the Philippines
# Blind Pig Who Wants To Fly by Indonesian Edwin, on being Chinese in Indonesia.
Boy and Shahida were not allowed by the Board of Film Censors (BFC), Media Development Authority (MDA) of Singapore.
As of press time, the MDA was not able to respond to queries on the reasons for
the ban.
The festival withdrew the other four movies because the films were rated R21 with proposed cuts for sexual scenes.
The festival has a policy of screening only uncut films.
A spokesman said tickets for the withdrawn films had not been put on sale so no refunds were necessary.
The festival runs from next Tuesday till April 25.
Kan Lume's Female Games was cited for prolonged sex scenes. The 33-year-old film-maker is no stranger to controversy as Solos, which he co-directed, was withdrawn from the festival in 2007.
It was about the homosexual relationship between a teacher and his student.
He tells Life! that his role as a film-maker is to make films from his unique perspective: 'If that perspective is a truthful representation of someone's relationship, gay or otherwise, I should be allowed to show it.
'Senseless onscreen violence should be under greater scrutiny than human sexuality, not the other way round.'
The festival said the four films that were given one-time screening contain offensive language, mature themes and sexual scenes.
The four films are:
# Wendy And Lucy, a critically acclaimed small movie where Michelle Williams of Brokeback Mountain fame plays a drifter hoping to start a new life in Alaska
# The Wackness, in which a pot dealer comes of age in 1994 New York
# Men's Group, a debut feature about the emotional lives of men
# Weltstadt, in which two German delinquents attack a homeless man.
Five films were withdrawn last year and six films from the 2004 festival.
A festival spokesman said the selection of films is based on artistic merit.
Kan Lume says the BFC should allow all films to be screened uncut at the festival as the 'thrill of a festival as opposed to regular cinema is that films get to be idiosyncratic and ask questions about society'.
To date, 37 screenings at the festival have sold out including titles such as Singapore Panorama Shorts, a collection of local short films, Malaysia's Sell Out! and Canada's Dim Sum Funeral which stars Russell Wong and Bai Ling.
Source: The Straits Times
Copyright Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. Permission required for reproduction.
by Wong Kim Hoh
The Straits Times, Apr 10, 2009
SINGAPORE'S best-known women's group, the Association of Women for Action and Research (Aware), has seen a dramatic changing of the guard - which some members are describing as nothing short of a leadership grab.
When Aware held its annual general meeting on March 28, everyone expected the usual: No more than 30 or 40 members would turn up at its Dover Crescent centre, and a prepared slate of candidates would be voted into office easily.
Instead, more than 100 people came, the majority of whom had joined Aware only in recent months.
And when the election of office bearers began, almost every position was
challenged by new faces, who won by wide majorities.
In the end, nine out of 12 executive committee spots went to the newcomers.
One older member who won without a contest was Mrs Claire Nazar, a former corporate counsel nominated to be president by outgoing Aware chief Constance Singam.
But barely a week into her new term, and before making her first statement as president, Mrs Nazar quit suddenly this week.
She confirmed that she had resigned, but declined to say any more when reached by The Straits Times.
It is not known who will now become president.
Longtime members took two other positions: Chew I-Jin as assistant honorary treasurer and Caris Lim Chai Leng was elected a committee member.
The election results have left longtime Aware members in shock.
Former president Tan Joo Hymn, 38, told The Straits Times the big turnout at the AGM surprised her.
'I arrived at the meeting late and found out that I was No. 100 on the attendance list. I've been a member for 10 years, and never before has there been such a turnout,' said the former lawyer who is now a full-time mother.
Another former president, writer Dana Lam, 57, said: 'There were many faces I had not seen before, and I found that very strange.
'In previous years, even if there were new members, they would be known to one or more of the older members.'
The first indication that something was afoot came when Ms Chew, an Aware veteran, was challenged and defeated handsomely by new member Charlotte Wong Hock Soon for the post of vice-president.
Ms Chew was later elected unopposed as assistant honorary treasurer.
'It was alarming,' said Ms Lam. 'How could a new member who had just joined for a couple of months, and whom we knew nothing about, be picked over someone who has been with Aware for more than 15 years?'
Some of the older members immediately began checking the attendance list.
Ms Tan said: 'We found that about 80 of the 102 who turned up were new members who joined between January and March this year.'
Aware, a feminist group that has prided itself on being 'all inclusive', has never vetted the people who apply to be members.
Men can join too, as associate members.
As it dawned on them that a leadership grab was imminent, some older members at the AGM tried asking the newcomers who they were, what they stood for, and why they wanted to be in charge.
They got only the briefest answers, they said.
Ms Lam said she tried suggesting that new members serve a stint on Aware's various sub-committees before standing for election to leadership positions.
But such suggestions went unheeded as the election proceeded, with more newcomers winning executive committee positions by landslide margins.
Ironically, the old guard at Aware had been working towards changing their Constitution to make it a rule that only those who have been members for at least a year would be eligible to join the ex-co.
There is currently no rule to bar a brand new member from seeking office, and that was what happened at the AGM.
Ms Tan said: 'We were simply outnumbered. Technically, they got in legitimately.'
She added that the way the election proceeded was so unusual, it was hard to imagine that the takeover was not a planned effort.
'It could not be pure coincidence,' she said.
But little is known of Aware's new leaders, aside from the fact that they include women from the corporate sector, lawyers, company directors and academics.
Older members said the newcomers spoke well but would not elaborate on their plans for Aware.
'When asked if they believed in equality, they kept repeating they were there to support women and to make sure they got ahead and got all the opportunities given to them,' Ms Lam said.
Older members were keen to know if the newcomers shared Aware's vision and values, including equality for all regardless of race, religion or sexuality.
But one outspoken new member from the floor, who identified herself as Angela Thiang, said questions about the new office bearers' religion and their stand on homosexuality were not relevant.
Former Nominated Member of Parliament (NMP) Braema Mathi, a two-term president of Aware, told The Straits Times that she, like many other members, was concerned.
'If you are keen to serve, you don't challenge every position. We do not know who they are,' said the former journalist who is now in Bangkok doing consultancy work for international women's group Unifem.
'It is very troubling, more so because I've heard the new president has resigned.'
Almost a fortnight into their new roles, the new leaders of Aware were not entertaining calls from the media this week.
New honorary secretary Jenica Chua Chor Ping told The Straits Times a press release would be issued 'in a few days' and added that until then, the committee would not answer any questions.
A check showed that some of those at the AGM and on the new committee have appeared in The Straits Times Forum Page.
Ms Chua, Ms Thiang and Dr Alan Chin, a male member of Aware who attended the AGM and supported the newcomers, all wrote letters to this newspaper between August and October 2007.
In a letter on Oct 17 that year, Ms Chua said NMP Siew Kum Hong had overstepped his non-partisan role and advanced the homosexual cause by tabling a petition in Parliament to repeal Section 377A of the Penal Code which criminalises homosexual sex between consenting men.
In another letter on Oct 25, she took issue with a Straits Times report which said NMP Thio Li-Ann had been 'visibly distraught' when she opposed Mr Siew's petition vigorously.
Ms Chua said Ms Thio had dealt with several points succinctly, with humour and passion.
Dr Chin and Ms Thiang both wrote letters to caution against the risks of promoting the homosexual lifestyle.
Meanwhile, news of Aware's AGM has spread among older members who did not attend the meeting, as well as civil society groups.
The most frequently-asked questions: Who are the new women in charge, why do they want the leadership, and what are their plans for Aware?
Ms Mathi said: 'The building of an institution takes many years; building its value system is even harder.
'Why can't they come in and be part of the process, and build it together and in a more evolutionary manner? That way, the comfort level will be high for everyone.'
Former newspaper editor and media consultant Peter Lim, a longtime associate member of Aware, said he was very surprised to learn what had taken place.
Asked why he thought a group of newcomers would want to take control, he said he did not know if it was an orchestrated effort.
But he thought Aware would be attractive to those seeking to be in charge of an established institution. Setting up a new outfit would take too much time and trouble.
'Aware has built up its credentials over the years and achieved more than a few things,' he said.
Three former Aware presidents - Ms Claire Chiang, Dr Kanwaljit Soin and Ms Mathi - have served as NMPs.
'Aware is a brand name and most people regard it as the leading voice of the feminists and modern women in Singapore,' said Mr Lim.
Source: The Straits Times
Copyright Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. Permission required for reproduction.
Tags: AWARE, Straits Times, Women