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HBO documentary about Sergio Viera de Mello airs May 2010, beginning May 6 Reviewed by Steve Hansch This month, beginning May 6, HBO television will premiere its riveting documentary âSergioâ based on the book âChasing the Flameâ by Samantha Power about the Brazilian diplomat Sergio Vieira de Mello. The film includes notable interviews from refugee and aid experts, and surveys Sergioâs life in brief. Giving short shrift to much of his United Nations work at UNHCR, and does not discuss OCHA, it primarily conveys the message that he was one of the first in to Cambodia in the late 1980s to negotiate with the Khmer Rouge, and then was a participatory and sympathetic leader of East Timor after its independence and UN trusteeship. Over half of the screen-time is devoted to
the circumstances of Sergioâs death in Greg Barker, the filmâs director, took the
decision to anchor the story around the compelling
search-and-rescue operation by two humble and heroic US army
medics: Andre
Valentine and William von Zehle, who struggled to find and
extract Sergio after he was buried in the United Nations
compound that was bombed on August 19, 2003. These two After a long and distinguished career
primarily in humanitarian aid, Sergio had been appointed in
2003 by Kofi Annan to head up the new U.N. operation in Much of the strength of the documentary derives from the original interviews with individuals who worked with Sergio, such as Dennis McNamara, who led UNHCRâs protection work for a long time. Somewhat ironically, it features Richard Holbrooke who takes credit for Sergioâs selection to head the UN operation in East Timor, ironic perhaps since Holbrooke has been criticized in his role as Assistant Secretary of State for East Asia for allowing U.S. weapons to continue to flow to Indonesia in 1977, after Indonesiaâs 1975 invasion of East Timor, which it would occupy until 1999. In an advance showing at the U.S. State Department in April 2010, attended by numerous U.S. refugee officials who knew Sergio, as well as Samantha Power, it was noted that he specialized in listening to all persons and sides, even within the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, making him the rare individual in a bureaucracy who was liked by everyone. Barker also made the excellent documentary about the Rwandan genocide, âGhosts of Rwandaâ, which is useful for classroom teaching and discussion. âSergioâ teaches little about the United Nations, or complex emergencies, or aid operations and is less useful to learn from. The key message of Sergioâs career, the film advances, is the value of being willing to talk with combatants, rebels and even those guilty of war crimes. Steven Hansch is a member of the board of the World Hunger Education Service, serves on several other non-profit boards, teaches about humanitarian aid at several universities, and has worked overseas conducting nutrition and public health programs, primarily in emergencies. |