Di Trans TV hanya ada satu program anak-anak yaitu
SURAT SAHABAT, setiap hari Minggu jam 08.00 WIB. Surat Sahabat adalah salah
satu dari 10 finalis dalam ABU CASSBA UNICEF : Child Rights Award 2005.
ABU = Asia-Pasific Broadcast Union
CASSBA = Cable & Satellite
Broadcasting Association of Asia
UNICEF = united nation for
ABU CASBAA UNICEF
Child Rights Award 2005
The top ten finalists of the Child Rights
Award 2005 have been announced.The winner will be presented the award during a gala
presentation at the CASBAA 2005 Ball in Hong Kong.
The top
ten finalists in this year's competition were:
• Sunday Report: Big Head
Babies
produced by Television Broadcasts Limited (Hong Kong)
This episode of regular news current affairs series exposes the vulnerability
of China's
rural poor by following the story of baby Qianlin, who sick from contaminated
milk powder, suffers form swollen heads and severe malnutrition and whose
family seeks medical help in the nearby city.
• Surat Sahabat: Daman Anak Dayak Ngaju (Letter
from a Friend: Daman, child of Dayak Ngaju) produced by Trans TV (Indonesia)
This episode of a series called Surat Sahabat, a semi documentary programme for
children aged between 7 and 18 years old, focuses on the life of children in a
remote part of Indonesia.
Told through the eyes and perspective of the children, the half an hour series
provide both an entertaining and educational way for Indonesia
children to learn about their country's rich cultural diversity.
• Segah At Nusantara produced by Mahaka Visual (Indonesia)
This animated children's series, focuses on the struggle between
development and conservation in Indonesia.
Through the adventures of a young boy Segah, who lives in secluded and pristine
forest of Kalimantan
Tengah, we come to understand the threat to
natural preservation and cultural value as developers seek to destroy the
forest.
• Talk with Your Baby - SOS
from the babies who don't smile produced by Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation (Japan)
This one-year-chronicle of Tsuruga, a 59-year-old midwife in Japan,
provides an insight into the challenges facing new mothers and their infants.
It demonstrates the trials and tribulations of adjusting to life with a newborn
and learning how to interact and stimulate them. The love and guidance
demonstrated by the regular interactions with Tsuranga, illustrate the
importance of having support and advice to make the transition to motherhood.
• The 300 Meters Adventure - produced by Shizuoka Broadcasting System (Japan)
A moving and intimate portrayal of a young ten year old girl, who although born
blind, struggles to live a normal life with her parents and younger sister.
With an acute sense of sound and extraordinary music talent, this one hour
documentary chronicles her life over a year and provides an insight into the
life of a blind child.
• In-Depth 60
Minutes - Caught Between Tragedy & hope: Reformatory school children produced by Korean Broadcasting System (Republic of Korea)
This one hour documentary provides a rare glimpse into the life of
young teenagers detained in reformatory schools in the Republic
of Korea. The first time that
permission has been given to shoot in the reform schools, two different crews
track their day to day operation and the impact on these adolescents living in
them.
• A Bridge Over Troubled
Waters - Da Zhaward Maurman (Swara) produced by Samara Minallah (Pakistan)
This documentary explores the tradition of Swara, a custom followed in North
West Frontier Province
in Pakistan,
when daughters are given in marriage to the aggrieved family as compensation in
a murder or a serious crime committed by their brothers or fathers.
It exposes how this tradition continues to deny girls their rights and forces
them into early and often abusive marriages.
• I-Witness: The GMA
Documentaries "Batak" (Child Drug Pusher) produced by GMA Network, INC, (Philippines)
This news style documentary explores the devastating impact of drugs
on children. Each segment of the programme portrays a different
perspective of children aged between 9 and 15 years whose lives are being
controlled by drugs either as pushers, users or sellers.
• Juvenile Injustice produced by Karen Davilla ABS-CBN Channel 2, Philippines
An in-depth hour long documentary, sheds light on the harsh reality
facing young juveniles left languishing in over crowded prisons and detained
with adults while awaiting their sentences. By documenting the story of four
young detainees and also exploring efforts underway in the Philippines
to reform the juvenile justice system, the exposé demonstrates the urgent need
to do more to speed up this process.
• Kabataan News Network
(Youth News Network), produced by Probe Media Foundation, Inc. (Philippines)
This innovative child focused and produced television series provides an outlet
for children to report on their own stories from their own perspective. This
episode includes short stories including a story on colorful butterfly
sanctuary in Cebu City,
a festival in Mountain Province
where young people express themselves through a band festival, the life of the
families of over seas Filipino workers and a look at the state of kite flying.
Pemenangnya
adalah
Philippine broadcaster ABS-CBN
Channel 2 wins prestigious 2005 ABU CASBAA UNICEF Child Rights Award
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28th October 2005, Hong Kong - Philippine
broadcaster ABS - CBN Channel 2 has won the 2005 year's ABU CASBAA UNICEF
Child Rights Award for an episode of their current affairs series
Correspondent entitled Juvenile
Injustice.
The Child Rights Award, established in 2001, is given each year in
recognition of the best television programming on a child rights issue
produced in the Asia-Pacific region. It recognizes the efforts of
broadcasters in pursuing both the production of top quality children's
programming and better news coverage of children's issues.
"We salute broadcasters of the Asia Pacific who participated in this
year's award process and who continue to demonstrate their commitment to
producing quality television for and about children," said Simon Twiston
Davies, CEO of the Cable & Satellite Broadcasting Association of Asia
(CASBAA).
Juvenile Injustice,
an in-depth hour-long documentary, sheds light on the harsh reality facing
young juveniles left languishing in over crowded prisons and detained with
adults while awaiting their sentences. By documenting the story of four young
detainees and also exploring efforts underway in the Philippines to reform
the juvenile justice system, the exposé demonstrates the urgent need to do
more to speed up this process.
Karen Davila, the producer of Juvenile Injustice and representing ABS-CBN Channel 2,
was presented with the award during a gala presentation at the CASBAA 2005
Ball in Hong Kong. The entry competed with 50 programmes from 10 countries
including Bhutan, China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Japan, Mongolia, Pakistan,
Philippines, the Republic of Korea, and Singapore.
"The Child Rights Award is an important part of what must be an ongoing
effort to strengthen the commitment and capacity of broadcasters in Asia and
the Pacific to continue to produce quality programming on children's issues
that educate, inform and break down stereotypes," said David Astley,
Secretary-General of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union.
The winning entry was selected by a panel of jurors made up of distinguished
television producers and industry representatives including; Ms. Kesang Chuki
Dorjee, Head of Children, Youth and Women Programming at Bhutan Broadcasting;
Norliza Mohd Ali from Radio Television Malaysia; Catherine Nebauer, Senior
Vice President & General Manager from Nickelodeon Asia; Michael Peschardt
from the BBC; Jeanne Hallacy, a producer and documentary filmmaker from Asia
Works in Bangkok; and Amar Keshar Simha, an independent producer from
Pakistan.
"This year's entries cover a wide range of child rights issues from the
rights of indigenous children to the plight of children living on the
streets. They illustrate the power of television to communicate and educate
an audience on the situation of children with compassion, intelligence and
insight," said Madeline Eisner, Regional Communication Advisor for
UNICEF Regional East Asia and the Pacific's office.
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