African Moot (film)

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Directed byShameela Seedat
Production
companies
Generation Africa
Social Transformation and Empowerment Projects (STEPS)
Undercurrent Film & Television
Tuffi Films
Release date
  • May 2022 (2022-05)
Running time
83 minutes
African Moot
Directed byShameela Seedat
Production
companies
Generation Africa
Social Transformation and Empowerment Projects (STEPS)
Undercurrent Film & Television
Tuffi Films
Release date
  • May 2022 (2022-05)
Running time
83 minutes
CountriesSouth Africa
Finland
LanguagesEnglish
French
Portuguese
Swahili

African Moot is a 2022 South African documentary film written and directed by lawyer turned filmmaker Shameela Seedat.[1] The film is based on a set of aspiring lawyers who compete in the African Human Rights Moot Court Competition by representing the top law schools from their respective nations and they turn up for the event which is held in Gaborone, Botswana for a duration of one week at the African Court of Human Rights where social topics are taken up for debates which are deemed as fictional court cases.[2][1] According to The Africa Report, it was ranked among top ten most notable African films of 2022.[3]

The documentary encompasses and elaborates about how passionate are the young African law students about their causes and how their ideas are generally very progressive, while aiming to protect the weakest parts of African society including the human rights of migrants in Africa as well as the members of the LGBTQ community.[4] The African lawmakers reflect on their thought process through their extraordinary oratory skills and knowledge about the law for the mock-trial at the African Human Rights Moot Court Competition, an open platform and discourse where these young African law students can raise their voice and give their opinions and debate about the most pressing human rights concerns in African region.[4][5]

Production

The film was produced by Generation Africa in collaboration with Social Transformation and Empowerment Projects (STEPS), Undercurrent Film & Television and Tuffi Films.[6][1] The film was one of the 25 films which was selected for the Generation Africa project. The film project marked the second documentary directorial venture for filmmaker Shameela Seedat after Whispering Truth to Power (2018). The filmmaker Shameela Seedat arranged teams from four different nations for the documentary including law students from Makerere University in Uganda, American University in Cairo in Egypt, University of Cape Town in South Africa and University of Nairobi in Kenya.[6][7]

Release

Accolades

References

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