POST
PRODUCTION
SCRIPT
Foreign
Correspondent
2021
Women
of the Revolution
29
mins 32 secs
©2021
ABC
Ultimo Centre
700
Harris Street Ultimo
NSW
2007 Australia
GPO
Box 9994
Sydney
NSW
2001 Australia
Phone:
61 419 231 533
Precis
|
"If
you're scared, go home," says 27-year-old Maria as she heads out on
another freezing day to front the police and protest against Belarus'
long-time leader Alexander Lukashenko. |
|
|
In
the lead up to last year's election, Lukashenko locked up the men who stood
against him. The women stood in their place and won huge support in the
national vote. But the dictator refused to yield, declaring he'd won by a
landslide. |
|
|
Protests
erupted and there were mass arrests of men. Again, the women stepped up and
have been protesting ever since. |
|
|
The
revolution's icon is 74-year-old great-grandmother, Nina Baginskaya. Short
but fierce, Nina's confrontations with policemen almost twice her size have
made her a social media star. |
|
|
"She's
a really inspiring person," says Maria about Nina. "She's not
scared of anything. She doesn't give a flying f*** about all of the police
and everything." |
|
|
Working
with local crews, former Russia correspondent Eric Campbell gives us a rare
insight into a country where most of the foreign media has been banned. |
|
|
We
meet the 'president in exile' Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, now living in
Lithuania. She became the main opposition candidate after her activist
husband was jailed. |
|
|
"The
government got rid of strong candidates. But they didn't know every strong
man has a strong woman who supports him." |
|
|
We
visit Nina's country house, where she sews the banned Belarusian flag, in
preparation for another confrontation with the police. |
|
|
"Evil
cannot win, fascism cannot win," she says. |
|
|
Maria
is arrested and charged and while she has no intention of stopping, she
admits the police brutality is taking its toll. |
|
|
"I
don't remember a day when I didn't saw [sic] a dream with police," she
says. "I'm dreaming how they enter my apartment, how they detain me. So
it's some kind of huge national trauma." |
|
|
Lukashenko's
strategy is to belittle the women. |
|
|
"Our
constitution is not made for a woman," he says. "Our society hasn't
matured to vote for a woman." |
|
|
But
it's not working, and the women just won't stay at home. |
|
|
"It's
scary to think of the future but it's even more scary to think what will
happen to us if we will stop", says Maria. |
|
Protest
crowd. Super: |
CROWD: Nina! Nina! |
00:00 |
Nina
at protest |
ERIC CAMPBELL, Reporter: Nina Baginskaya is a
74-year-old great grandmother who´s become the icon of a revolution. |
00:12 |
|
MAN: They
don't let you walk, do they? NINA: Well, at my age it's not easy to run
anyway. WOMAN:
Well done! Thank you! MAN: Excuse me, can I take a photo with you? WOMAN: You are our pride! |
00:20 |
Police
arrive at protest |
Music |
00:36 |
Maria
at protest |
MARIA:
I´ve never been scared since the 9th
of August so, what´s the reason to be scared? If you´re scared stay at home
and that´s it. |
00:41 |
|
ERIC CAMPBELL, Reporter: Maria Pugachjova is a
27-year-old office worker who wants to be just like Nina. MARIA: She's really inspiring person, definitely.
She's not scared of anything. She doesn't give a |
00:49 |
Maria
interview |
flying
fuck about all of the police and everything. |
01:03 |
Protestors
chant |
|
01:07 |
|
ERIC CAMPBELL, Reporter: Maria and Nina are part
of an extraordinary uprising – led by women – in the former Soviet republic
of Belarus. |
01:11 |
Lukashenko. Various |
President Alexander Lukashenko is Europe's
longest-ruling dictator. But he's faced near daily protests since August,
when he refused to give up power to a woman. |
01:18 |
Lukashenko at microphone |
LUKASHENKO:
Our constitution is not
made for a woman. Our society isn't ready to vote for a woman. |
01:33 |
Sound
recordist mics Maria |
ERIC CAMPBELL, Reporter: Working with local
filmmakers, we´ve been following some of the key women in this revolution…. |
01:42 |
Svetlana |
CREW
MEMBER: We´re recording now Eric. We can go. ERIC CAMPBELL, Reporter: …among them Svetlana
Tikhanovskya, who had to flee the country after she ran for president. |
01:47 |
Eric
computer interview with Svetlana. Super: |
ERIC CAMPBELL,
Reporter: Alexander Lukashenko has declared himself president of Belarus, but
am I talking to the rightful elected president of Belarus now? SVETLANA: For sure, you are. |
01:58 |
Protestors.
Title: |
Music
|
02:08 |
Archival.
Campbell reports. Riot
police/arrests. Super: |
|
02:23 |
|
ERIC
CAMPBELL, Reporter: I started
covering Lukashenko in the mid 1990s – that's how long he's been in power.
Even back then, it was a similar situation. Lukashenko may not have the law on his side, but he does control the
police and security service. And they appear willing to do whatever it takes
to stop his opponents. |
02:31 |
|
As the ABC correspondent based in Moscow, I
watched how he kept Russia´s small neighbour in check by crushing protests
and jailing any genuine challengers. He did the same ahead of last year's
election, locking up the men who ran the opposition. But this time, the women
took over. |
02:53 |
Svetlana
addresses rally |
Svetlana Tikhanovskaya became the main opposition
candidate after her activist husband was jailed. |
03:14 |
|
SVETLANA: "The
government got rid of strong candidates but they didn´t know, behind every
strong man is a strong woman." |
03:28 |
|
My
first step was made only for my husband, because he was in jail he couldn't
participate himself, but what he was doing for people, it was very important
for him. |
03:46 |
Svetlana
interview |
So I
just decided to support him somehow and gave my documents instead of him. |
03:57 |
Svetlana
campaigning |
ERIC
CAMPBELL, Reporter: Her campaign
captured the public´s imagination rather more than Lukashenko's insistence
that women belonged in the kitchen. |
04:05 |
Lukashenko TV appearance |
He even suggested there´d be no point
debating her. LUKASHENKO: What would we debate with her? She's just made some tasty chops, maybe she
fed her kids, and so on. There's still a nice smell of chops and she must
debate something. |
04:16 |
Svetlana
campaigning |
ERIC CAMPBELL, Reporter: Knowing how ruthless he could be,
Tikhanovskaya sent her young children across the border to the Lithuanian
capital, Vilnius. |
04:38 |
Svetlana
casts ballot |
But as election day approached, it
seemed victory was hers. Did
you ever expect to win? |
04:46 |
Eric
computer interview with Svetlana |
Did you expect to get so much
support? |
04:54 |
|
SVETLANA:
I am representative of several candidates. I'm like not as Svetlana
Tikhanovskaya, I'm a person who is opposite to Lukashenko. |
04:56 |
Svetlana
onstage at rally |
And
all those people who would vote separately for different candidates, they voted
for me as for united candidate. |
05:08 |
Riot
police move in on rally |
ERIC CAMPBELL, Reporter: But Lukashenko had no intention of handing over
power. The Electoral Commission declared he had won by a landslide, claiming
one in ten voted for Tikhanovskaya. |
05:18 |
|
Hundreds of thousands stormed the streets in
protest to be met by an army of riot police. When Tikhanovskaya challenged
the result, she was threatened with jail. SVETLANA:
I have to choose, |
05:36 |
Svetlana
interview |
just
to stay in Belarus and go straight to jail, or I can leave country and join
my children in Vilnius. That was the choice. |
05:52 |
Crossing
border |
ERIC
CAMPBELL, Reporter: That
night she was allowed to cross to Lithuania to join her five-year-old
daughter and ten-year-old son. She recorded a video asking forgiveness for
leaving. |
06:01 |
Svetlana
video |
SVETLANA:
I know many will understand me. Many will
judge me. Many will hate me. But God forbid you face the same choice I faced.
|
06:12 |
Riot
police at protests/shooting of Taraykouski |
ERIC CAMPBELL, Reporter: The protests went on regardless
as Tikhanovskaya tried to represent them from abroad. The crackdown was
immediate and brutal. Within hours, a protestor, Alexander Taraykouski, was
shot dead. Human rights groups claimed hundreds were tortured. State TV
labelled them criminals. |
06:32 |
State
TV news |
NEWSREADER: Aggressive youths
occupied the roads, blocked cars. |
06:55 |
Men
being arrested |
ERIC CAMPBELL, Reporter: After mass arrests of
men, thousands of women took their place. SVETLANA:
Women understood that they have to |
07:00 |
Svetlana
interview |
stand
in front of them and to defend them. |
07:11 |
Women
at protests |
They
didn't want to lead this revolution. They just wanted to support their men.
It just happened so naturally. NINA:
Evil cannot win, |
07:17 |
Nina |
fascism cannot win. |
07:33 |
Music
clip. Super: |
|
07:36 |
|
LYRICS:
I´m the cop who´s been driving a prison
truck for 20 years. My passengers are old ladies and convicts and cripples. |
07:39 |
|
ERIC CAMPBELL, Reporter: None has taken greater
risks, or inspired more courage, than retired geologist Nina Baginskaya,
celebrated here in a popular heavy metal song about the protests. |
07:48 |
|
LYRICS:
If you love your Motherland you´re
going to cop a beating. If you respect your Fatherland, the prosecutor is
waiting for you. |
08:00 |
Nina
pulls face covering off policeman |
CROWD: Nina!
Nina! ERIC CAMPBELL, Reporter: Her confrontations with
police have become some of the most famous images of the revolution. |
08:18 |
Police
grab Nina at protests |
Police arrest any media trying to film the
marches, but protestors have been shooting on smartphones and uploading to
independent websites. |
08:29 |
Nina
with supporters/at protests |
Music |
08:39 |
|
NINA: The youth have
mastered the technology. They have mobile phones, computers and the internet.
And they can speak the truth. |
08:45 |
Nina
to country cottage |
ERIC CAMPBELL, Reporter: She divides her time
between her apartment in Minsk, where she protests almost every day, and a
small country cottage a short drive from the capital. |
09:00 |
Nina
talks with man |
MAN: We
are standing next to a celebrity! NINA: I like it here more. |
09:12 |
|
MAN: Tell us how things are! Are you going to get
rid of that dumb-arse soon or not? NINA: He's
sacked himself. People aren´t listening to him anymore. |
09:19 |
|
ERIC CAMPBELL, Reporter: Even here she raises people's spirits when they're
losing hope. |
09:30 |
|
NINA: Calm
down, calm down. MAN: I can' t stand it when young people are
dying, when they are killing them, stabbing them, raping them, abducting them! NINA:
That's why I go to the protests with young people. |
09:34 |
|
MAN: I can´t go, I hardly can walk. NINA: It´s hard with crutches but I still can
run, I'll go for you. |
09:47 |
|
MAN: I
have heart problems and cancer. I would go, but I can't. NINA: You're so upset. It´s fine. Everyone does
what they can. |
09:52 |
|
Music |
10:05 |
Nina
collecting berries |
ERIC CAMPBELL, Reporter: Nina Baginskaya was an
activist even before Lukashenko came to power. In 1986, an explosion at the
Chernobyl nuclear power plant in Ukraine showered the countryside with deadly
radiation. It inspired her to fight for Belarus's independence from the
Soviet Union. NINA: They didn't tell us the truth. They didn´t
tell to stay home and not go out and breathe the Chernobyl ash that was
falling from the clouds like rain. |
10:09 |
|
To them we're not human. They just care about
their salaries and positions. |
10:49 |
Nina
interview in home |
So I started supporting all movement in Belarus
to revive our nation. |
10:59 |
Archival.
National Parade |
|
11:12 |
|
ERIC
CAMPBELL, Reporter: Belarus won its
freedom from the Soviet Union in 1991, but when Lukashenko came to power
three years later, he snuffed out its new democracy and its symbols of
independence. The former collective farm boss pushed for reunification with
Russia, hoping to one day rule both countries. He cracked down on the
Belarussian language and even banned the national red and white flag in
favour of the red and green Soviet banner. |
11:17 |
Nina
interview |
NINA: Police, prosecutors and courts started to
sentence us for street rallies, especially for our Chernobyl protests. |
11:49 |
Nina
sews flag |
ERIC CAMPBELL, Reporter: Decades on, she continues
to fight. In her apartment, she sews the banned red and white flags she takes
to each protest. NINA: Seven flags have been taken away from me by
police, so this is the eighth. |
12:01 |
Nina
cuts stick for flag |
ERIC CAMPBELL,
Reporter: After months of being arrested on a regular basis,
she's now become the only protester police dare not detain, Lukashenko
himself giving a mocking order to leave her be. |
12:19 |
Lukashenko
in meeting |
LUKASHENKO:
Watch out! Don't arrest
Nina Baginskaya. If you take away Nina Baginskaya, there will be no
opposition. |
12:37 |
Maria
leaves apartment and catches bus |
Music
|
12:46 |
|
ERIC CAMPBELL, Reporter: Not so long ago, Maria
Pugachjova never protested. Now, it's all she can think about, even when she
goes to work or meets friends. MARIA: People
still live in this reality and they have no chance not to talk about it.
Because every day something happens. |
12:51 |
Maria
interview in apartment |
This is my life then. |
13:11 |
Maria
with women at march |
ERIC
CAMPBELL, Reporter: Whenever she can, she joins women's
marches, Lukashenko labelling them prostitutes and alcoholics. MARIA:
It's already |
13:14 |
Maria
interview |
week
number 13, if I'm not mistaken. So, it's unbelievable how people are still
believing that we will win soon, because the protests never lasted that long
in Belarus. |
13:24 |
Police
lock down neighbourhood |
ERIC CAMPBELL, Reporter: But often it's a battle
just to get to a protest. |
13:39 |
Maria
on street |
MARIA: Fascist! |
13:46 |
|
ERIC CAMPBELL, Reporter: Police lock down entire
neighbourhoods to stop them marching. |
13:49 |
Protest
at Maria's neighbourhood |
MARIA: As you can hear everyone is screaming,
"Shame, shame, shame." So they are not letting us join each other,
but you can see that people are making noise, so we are everywhere,
everywhere. |
13:55 |
Women
outside apartment |
WOMEN: Long
live Belarus!... Long live Belarus! |
14:18 |
|
ERIC CAMPBELL, Reporter: Maria's group retreats to
a friend's apartment to wait out the lockdown. |
14:25 |
|
MARIA: So
maybe we can see what is happening so we can join maybe somewhere. So I think
we'll have a cup of tea or something |
14:32 |
Maria
and women inside apartment |
|
14:41 |
|
ERIC
CAMPBELL, Reporter: A locked
apartment doesn't make them safe from arrest. |
14:50 |
Phone
footage. Police burst into apartment |
Every weekend, police have been raiding flats to
find protesters, some of the violence recorded secretly and posted to
independent news sites. |
14:54 |
Maria
and women inside apartment, looking at social media posts |
For now, they're safe, but from social media they
see police have started grabbing people on the street they just left. |
15:19 |
|
WOMAN:
They say people are being arrested
on Miroshnichenko Street. Police are raiding the yards. I just don't
understand. Stun grenades and gunfire at Miroshnichenko now? |
15:18 |
Police
beat and drag protestors |
ERIC CAMPBELL, Reporter: Police aren't the only
danger at mass gatherings. Belarus is suffering a crippling COVID pandemic,
thanks largely to Lukashenko downplaying it. He even suggesting drinking
vodka could prevent infection. |
15:33 |
Maria
interview |
MARIA: Maybe the virus is not that
painful as a young guy being killed by police. |
15:53 |
|
So
COVID is not that important for people now. And I understand them. When
people ask me, what did I do before the 9th of August, I don't remember my
life before that. So COVID, yeah okay. But we still have a person to fight
out of this country. |
16:03 |
Maria
with friends in apartment |
ERIC
CAMPBELL, Reporter: As they wait, they enjoy themselves as best they can. |
16:19 |
|
WOMAN: Oh, the media is here. Oh no! We're drinking tea. What will they
think about us in Australia? WOMAN 2: They'll think we're alcoholics, drug
addicts, unemployed and prostitutes. WOMAN 3: We are dealing with stress. You
discredit our revolution. |
16:27 |
Anton
in the kitchen preparing food |
|
16:44 |
|
WOMAN 4: It's so weird there are lots of women
being waited on by a man. It's insane. MARIA: I
bet Australian women would love that. 'See that revolution they're having. I
want that too.' WOMAN 4: Thank you Anton, you're so nice… |
16:47 |
Anton
serves food |
Are you married, Anton? MARIA: How old are you, Anton? We'll marry you. ANTON: I'm old. |
17:09 |
|
ERIC CAMPBELL, Reporter: For Maria, joking
around is one way of dealing with trauma. MARIA: Remembering the first few days, I saw a lot
of blood on the streets. |
17:17 |
|
I saw
a lot of awful things that are still in front of my eyes and maybe that's one
of the reasons, because I'm still protesting like every single moment I have.
|
17:26 |
Women
watch footage on social media |
Music |
17:37 |
|
MARIA: I don't remember a day when I didn't saw a
dream with police in that dream. |
17:44 |
|
So
I'm dreaming how they enter my apartment, how they detain me. So it's some
kind of huge national trauma. So all that is left for us is to fight a
peaceful way that we've chosen. |
17:49 |
Maria
and women leave apartment |
|
18:12 |
|
ERIC CAMPBELL, Reporter: Finally, it's too dark to
join the protest. There'll be more marching tomorrow. MARIA: Thank you for the cake. Long
live Belarus! WOMAN:
It's a long goodbye. Come on! Get out! |
18:17 |
|
ERIC CAMPBELL, Reporter: While the women march on the streets, |
18:32 |
Svetlana
with EU leaders |
Svetlana Tikhanovskaya tries to build support
internationally. Russia is still backing Lukashenko, so she's
focussing on the EU, meeting leaders like France´s Emmanuel Macron and
Germany´s Angela Merkel, and reaching out to Joe Biden. SVETLANA:
The strategy is |
18:39 |
Svetlana
interview |
to set negotiations with our
authorities, not with Lukashenko, but with the authorities who can take responsibility. My mission, just to organise new elections,
where I'm not going to participate. |
18:58 |
|
ERIC
CAMPBELL, Reporter: You wouldn't participate? You don't want to be leader? |
19:14 |
|
SVETLANA: No, I don't want to be the
president of Belarus, because you know, we are really in deep economic hole.
And I think that the ruler should be at least experienced person who knows
how to rise up the economy of Belarus. |
19:17 |
Svetlana
New Year greeting video |
ERIC
CAMPBELL, Reporter: For now, she
continues to play the role of president in exile, even delivering a New
Year's presidential greeting. SVETLANA: We
all deserve a home. The new year will bring us home to a free Belarus. |
19:38 |
Lukashenko at New Year's ball |
ERIC CAMPBELL, Reporter: Lukashenko, meanwhile,
was filmed at a New Year´s Eve ball dancing with a Miss Belarus contestant.
Having forced his opponent to flee, he now mocks her for trying to lead from
abroad. |
20:00 |
Lukashenko clip |
LUKASHENKO: We intercepted a conference of these losers
— Tikhanovskaya, all these runaways. I was shocked when I saw the transcript
on my desk. Svetlana said: "Guys, what do you want from me? You
understand that I'm not the one who decides" - I'm quoting. "I'm not the one who decides" says our
president in Lithuania. |
20:17 |
Women
march |
Music |
20:43 |
|
ERIC CAMPBELL, Reporter: But the lack of central
control has been one of the revolution´s strengths. People have formed their
own protest groups – women, pensioners, neighbourhoods. It's meant Lukashenko
can't stop the revolt by jailing the leaders. |
20:49 |
Riot
police |
But after one particularly violent protest, we
find Maria dejected. Riot police arrested her and took her to a station to be
charged. MARIA:
They saw me, and they just like, |
21:03 |
Maria
interview |
"I
think you have pretty much fun these days, let's go." Just like,
"What?" Like, "Let's go, let's go, let's go." They were
smiling and you know just like, "We're going for a ride." |
21:20 |
Maria
lights cigarette |
ERIC
CAMPBELL, Reporter: In two weeks,
she´ll go to court to face a possible jail term. It's small comfort that as a woman she'll
probably fare better than the men. MARIA: Belarus is not really a
country full of feminists. |
21:35 |
Maria
interview |
So a lot of men think that they're
we´re just nice girls and that's it. They don't know how much |
21:51 |
Women
protest |
activity
and how much of ourselves we put into protests. They have no idea how many
emotions, how many strength we put how many every day routine. They don't
know. They think that it's a game for us, maybe that's why. On the other
hand, I saw many, many beaten girls, many |
21:58 |
Maria
interview |
aggressively
detained girls. So it depends. |
22:24 |
Maria
visits Nina |
Music |
22:27 |
|
ERIC
CAMPBELL, Reporter: A few days later,
she finds reason to regain her optimism. We organise for her to meet her
heroine Nina Baginskaya. |
22:37 |
|
NINA: Come in, we'll have some tea inside, not in
the corridor. |
22:47 |
|
ERIC CAMPBELL, Reporter: Nina normally shares her flat with one of her
granddaughters, but like many protesters she's had to disappear. |
22:54 |
Nina
and Maria drink tea |
NINA: My granddaughter is
not here now. She's hiding from authorities in an unknown location. MARIA: How old is she? NINA: She's 23 and she's
started to be interested in politics. |
23:05 |
|
ERIC CAMPBELL, Reporter: Maria starts pouring out
her anguish. |
23:24 |
Maria
and Nina |
MARIA:
I remember the first days – the 9th,
10th and 11th. I was on Pushkinskaya Square about an
hour before Taraykouski was killed. I remember guys in white T-shirts in
blood and all this violence. When you see these kinds of things you will
never forget it. NINA: Never forgive or forget. |
23:28 |
|
MARIA: I saw many times when you came to these
fascists with your flag… Wow! NINA:
Maria, at my age it's ridiculous to be afraid of anything. If you are sane and you realise your life
is coming to an end, then you want to use your talents and your courage to
resist evil. It's a goal of any normal person. |
23:56 |
Alya's
house |
Music |
24:24 |
Alya
collects wood |
ERIC
CAMPBELL, Reporter: Some people in Nina's generation still
support Lukashenko. Alya Valuyevich, who is 80, lives in a hamlet 200
kilometres from Minsk. After 26 years of Lukashenko's rule, the house still
has no heating or running water. She has to chop wood and fetch water from a
well. But she feels blessed. When the wind doesn't blow the antenna down she
can watch State TV. |
24:32 |
|
ALYA: I watch the news, I watch Lukashenko speak,
I watch "Field of Wonders", I watch "Fashion Verdict",
"Let's Get Married". I'm looking for a boyfriend. |
25:04 |
Alya
looks at book on Lenin |
ERIC
CAMPBELL, Reporter: Having lived most
of her life in Soviet times, she sees Lukashenko as a guarantor of stability.
Her monthly pension of 520 roubles – about 260 Australian dollars – covers
her basic needs. |
25:28 |
Alya
watches TV |
|
25:50 |
|
ALYA: How can I say anything bad about Lukashenko
if he is paying? |
25:55 |
Alya
interview |
We are getting our
pensions regularly, on the same day every month! There is nothing to say. The
young people shouldn't have protested. What did they achieve? Nothing! |
26:00 |
Alya
stokes fire |
A woman can't govern the
country like Lukashenko. It's a man's job. Only a man can govern. Not a
woman. |
26:26 |
|
Music |
26:43 |
Maria
prepares for court |
Music |
26:49 |
|
ERIC CAMPBELL,
Reporter: It's an hour before dawn and Maria is getting
ready for court, deciding what to pack and what to wear. MARIA: I'm packing my socks just in case they
will decide to give me arrest instead of fines, so I think it is better to be
prepared than not to be. |
26:54 |
|
I didn´t really want to read Shakespeare in
prison, but OK. I don't want to get sick. |
27:20 |
|
ERIC CAMPBELL, Reporter: Her main worry is not jail itself, but COVID. MARIA: You never know, because it's prison. You
cannot be safe enough. |
27:29 |
Maria
on bus |
Music
|
27:41 |
Maria
greets friend outside court |
ERIC
CAMPBELL, Reporter: Today, the random
roulette of punishment spins in her favour, and she's released with a fine.
She knows it may be worse next time, but she has no intention of stopping the
fight. |
27:49 |
Maria
interview |
MARIA: Yes. Of course. That's what all the people
do after the arrest. They go and keep protesting. |
28:02 |
Maria
and women friends march |
Music |
28:12 |
|
ERIC
CAMPBELL, Reporter: And so, on a freezing weekday afternoon she and her friends continue
marching. The uprising that began in August has turned into a battle of
wills. Maria's generation knows it has no future if Lukashenko stays in
power. The coming months will see who prevails – one brutal man with an army
of thugs or a peaceful revolution led by women. MARIA: Maybe
we'll change the history, I don't know, nobody knows. |
28:25 |
Maria
interview |
It's
scary to think about future, |
28:56 |
Women
march |
but
it's even more scary to think what will happen to us if we will stop. |
29:00 |
|
Music
|
29:08 |
Credits
[see below] |
|
29:16 |
Outpoint |
|
29:32 |
CREDITS:
Reporter
Eric Campbell
Producer
Ilya Kuzniatsou
Editor
Stuart Miller
Camera
Dasha Sapranetskaya
Dzianis Sakalouski
Ilya Kuzniatsou
Assistant
Editor
Tom Carr
Research
Anastasia Tenisheva
Archival
Research
Michelle Boukheris
Anastasia
Tenisheva
Senior
Production Manager
Michelle Roberts
Production
Manager
Victoria Allen
Digital
Producer
Matt Henry
Supervising
Producer
Lisa Mcgregor
Executive
Producer
Matthew Carney
Abc.net.au/foreign
©
2021 Australian Broadcasting Corporation