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Louise Leroux,
Shootfilms
Bunia | Ituri Province | DRC | 01/23
©2024 Shootfilms
Shot during the violent anti-UN riots, this cinema vérité documentary records a ground-level perspective of Canadian women peacekeepers in the Democratic Republic of Congo, a country under siege where rape has become a weapon of mass destruction.
Shot during the violent anti-UN riots, this cinema vérité documentary records a ground-level perspective of Canadian women peacekeepers in the Democratic Republic of Congo, a country under siege where rape has become a weapon of mass destruction.
Deployed as part of the UN's special victim’s unit to combat sexual violence, these Canadian policewomen collaborate with the Congolese national police in pursuit of war criminals and sexual predators.
Mélanie Beaulac,
Specialized Police Team (MONUSCO)
Simon Kimbangu University
Bukavu | Sud-Kivu Province | DRC | 01/23
©2024 Shootfilms
Deployed as part of the UN's special victim’s unit to combat sexual violence, these Canadian policewomen collaborate with the Congolese national police in pursuit of war criminals and sexual predators.
Mima Gentile
(Specialized Police Team, MONUSCO)
Saint Kizito Orphanage, Bunia, Province de l'Ituri, DRC | 01/23
©2024 Shootfilms
Over two months Louise Leroux recorded their mission, documenting their challenges, victories, failures, and disappointments amidst violence, death, and despair.
Martine Le Royer & Patrick Setiers
, SPT (MONUSCO)
&
Congolese Investigative Police Officers
Kasenyi Police Station | Ituri Province | DRC | 02/23
©2024 Shootfilms
Armed with her camera, Louise Leroux recorded their mission for 65 days, capturing their challenges, victories, failures and disappointments against an apocalyptic backdrop of violence, death and despair.
Congolese Police
Kasenyi Police Station
Ituri Province | DRC | 02/23
©2024 Shootfilms
In a country ransacked by three decades of civil war, where violent militant groups, political impunity and systemic corruption disallow civil authority, this film contrasts the unyielding optimism of these women peacekeepers with the crushing reality they face.
In a country ransacked by three decades of civil war, where violent militant groups, political impunity and systemic corruption disallow civil authority, this film contrasts the unyielding optimism of these women peacekeepers with the crushing reality they face.
Louise Leroux, Shootfilms
Kolomani Police Station
Bunia | Ituri Province | DRC | 01/23
©2024 Shootfilms
Egyptian Women Peacekeepers (MONUSCO)
Bukavu | Sud-Kivu Province | DRC | 01/23
©2024 Shootfilms
Martine Le Royer,
Specialized Police Team (MONUSCO)
&
Louise Leroux,
Shootfilms
Internally Displaced Persons Camp
Bunia | Ituri Province | DRC | 01/23
©2024 Shootfilms
Kigonze Internally Displaced Persons Camp
Bunia | Ituri Province | DRC | 02/23
©2024 Shootfilms
Kigonze Internally Displaced Persons Camp
Bunia | Ituri Province | DRC | 02/23
©2024 Shootfilms
Mélanie Beaulac,
Specialized Police Team (MONUSCO)
Kavumu | Sud-Kivu Province | DRC | 01/23
©2024 Shootfilms
Richard Blackburn & Louise Leroux,
Shootfilms
Kigonze Internally Displaced Persons Camp
Bunia | Ituri Province | DRC | 02/23
©2024 Shootfilms