• DEAD DONKEYS FEAR NO HYENAS



  • DEAD DONKEYS FEAR NO HYENAS



  • DEAD DONKEYS FEAR NO HYENAS



  • DEAD DONKEYS FEAR NO HYENAS



  • DEAD DONKEYS FEAR NO HYENAS



  • DEAD DONKEYS FEAR NO HYENAS



DEAD DONKEYS FEAR NO HYENAS

by Joakim Demmer

DEAD DONKEYS FEAR NO HYENAS

Sweden | Germany, Finland | 2017 | 80:00 min

Synopsis
A documentary thriller about land-grabbing and the global rush for farmland - the new green gold!

Around the globe, there is a massive commercial rush for farmland – the new green gold. One of the most profitable new spots for farming is Ethiopia. Hoping for export revenues, the Ethiopian government leases millions of hectares of allegedly unused land to foreign investors. But the dream of prosperity has a dark side - the most massive forced evictions in modern history, lost livelihoods of small farmers, harsh repression and a vicious spiral of violence. Contributing to this disaster are the EU, the World Bank and DFID, providing billions of dollars in development money. DEAD DONKEYS FEAR NO HYENAS investigates these foreign land investments and
exposes their impact on people’s lives. In the pursuit of truth, we meet investors, development bureaucrats, persecuted journalists, struggling environmentalists and small farmers deprived of their land.
Cast and Crew
  • Director Joakim Demmer
  • Producer Margarete Jangård
  • Screenwriter Joakim Demmer
  • Director of Photography Joakim Demmer, Ute Freund
  • Main cast Argaw Ashine (himself)
  • Editor Stefan Sundlöf, Frank Brummundt
  • Sound Design Janne Laine
  • Score Matthias Trippner
Director's Statement
DEAD DONKEYS FEAR NO HYENAS was triggered by a seemingly trivial scene at the airport in Addis
Ababa, six years back. Waiting for my flight late at night, I happened to see some tired workers at the tarmac who were loading food products on an airplane destined for Europe. At the same time, another team was busy unloading sacks with food aid from a second plane. It took some time to realize the real meaning of it – that this famine struck country, where millions are dependent on food aid, is actually exporting food to us. The bewilderment over this paradox would soon give way for something else – anger. Anger over the injustice, that hundreds of thousands of small farmers were robbed of the land that they and their ancestors had worked on
for generations, just to see it be given away to foreign investors coming from the other side of the world. The unbearable injustice that all these people’s livelihoods were ruined, not only meaning that they are losing the possibility to feed their families, but also an irreversible loss of their culture and identity. The anger also came over the ignorance, cynicism and sometimes pure stupidity of international societies like the EU, DFID, World Bank etc., whose intentions might mostly be good, but in this case, end up supporting a dictatorship and a disastrous development with our tax money, instead of helping the people. There would also come a feeling of shame when I realized how much land-grabbing is connected to ourselves. The sugar in my coffee, the cotton in my t-shirt and even the flowers for my mother might very well come from stolen land. Our companies, banks and pension funds, they are all investing in land. In the complex world of globalization, the responsibility might be so much dispersed that it apparently dissolves. But nevertheless, there are always people paying the price and they are real. Even if this project is very much a journey into the darkness, it has also been such an extreme privilege to meet so many great and courageous people in Ethiopia, South Sudan, Kenya and Cambodia. In spite of the very often high risks, we always came across people who were willing to take part in the film or were willing to support it. Some have already paid a very high price. Their reason for doing so is solely the hope that their voices at least shall be heard and that one day there will be an end to the injustice. This brings a big commitment to us as filmmakers, to spread their testimonies as much as possible, and my personal hope is that we will deserve their trust.
BIOGRAPHY
Director Joakim Demmer was born and grew up in southern Sweden. After studying Photography, he began working as a cameraman and film editor in Scandinavia. From 1995-2001 he studied directing at the German Academy of Film and Television (dffb) in Berlin.

Since his graduation he has been working as a filmmaker and cinematographer in Sweden and Germany.

Filmography
2016 IN THE LAND OF THE SAMI, doc.
2014 THE KING OF SUND, doc.
2009 A TRIP TO HARAR, doc.
2008 PAOLA MATADORA, doc.
2006 GATICA AT THE RIVER, doc.
2004 ANNA LINDH AND HER MURDERER, doc.
2003 TARIFA TRAFFIC, docu.
1999 PLAY-OFF, short
1997 VERGEHEN, short
1996 KITA, doc.
1995 FLIEGER, short
Original Languages

English

Production Company
WG Film
Västergatan 23, 21121 Malmö

Phone: +46 40 78150

Fax: +46 40 233510

film@wgfilm.com
http://www.wgfilm.com
Co-Production Company
Ma.ja.de. Filmproduktions GmbH
Germany
www.majade.de
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