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Sharmeen Obaid's 'A Girl in the River' wins best documentary at the Emmys

Sharmeen Obaid's 'A Girl in the River' wins best documentary at the Emmys

The documentary has previously won an Oscar for Best Documentary - Short Subject
Updated 06 Oct, 2017

Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy's documentary A Girl In The River has won the Best Documentary award at the 38th annual news and documentary Emmy Awards.

Sharmeen announced the good news from New York, where the award ceremony took place:

A Girl In The River, which is the story of a young survivor of an honour killing attempt, has triumphed over four PBS documentaries, including Children of Syria, Welcome to Leith, Thank You For Playing and The Look of Silence, to win the award.

In her acceptance speech last night, Sharmeen spoke of the courage of the subject of her documentary, "A 17-year-old girl had the bravery to stand up and the commitment to fight a system and because of that, a law was changed in Pakistan. And you had newspapers and television channels reporting honour killings reporting on honour killings in a different way. And it only took the commitment on one single person to do that."

A Girl in the River was also nominated in two other categories at this year's Emmys, Outstanding Short Documentary and Outstanding Music and Sound.

In 2016, the documentary earned Sharmeen her second Best Documentary Short Oscar after she won Pakistan's first Academy Award for Saving Face in 2012. She has also won Emmys for Children of Taliban and Saving Face.

Mohammed Naqvi's Among The Believers was also nominated at this year's Emmys in category Outstanding Politics and Government Documentary, but lost out to PBS' The Choice 2016.

Comments

irfan shamim farooqui Oct 06, 2017 10:47am
Many Congrats Sharmeen Obaid.
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Arshad Oct 06, 2017 11:27am
This Woman always make pictures that portrays Pakistan's negative image. I wonder who is funding her to make such movies ?
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Asad Baig Oct 06, 2017 11:56am
Congratulations to Sharmeen and the team for their dedication and the hard work.You have made Pakistan proud!
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Kamran Oct 06, 2017 12:02pm
Awesome, many congrats! Now can you also please make a documentary on one of the many positive things happening in Pakistan such as Edhi or Dr. Adeeb Rizvi or Dr Seemin Jamali?
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Faisal Azeem Oct 06, 2017 12:20pm
when she first got Oscar there was a lot of propaganda against miss Sharmeen. I never bothered with the negative comments..but now I am forced to think that why all films, carrying negative image of Pakistan as a society ....gets to Oscars and Emmys??
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s Oct 06, 2017 12:36pm
Sharmeen I will only hail you as victorious once you win the award for highlighting a positive aspect of Pakistani society. Very easy to win by highlighting the negativity.
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Ah Oct 06, 2017 12:49pm
Hearty congratulations. Keep on doing good work. And please do not get disheartened by some negative comments. These comments will be from people who do not want these social evils like honor killing to be stopped from happening. So ignore these people and continue your journey.
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Dr.Sadaf Oct 06, 2017 12:58pm
Not at all surprised.
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The end is near Oct 06, 2017 01:42pm
Well done Sharmeen. Keep it up! Congratulations!!
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Ahmed Oct 06, 2017 01:45pm
What impact this documentary will have on improving living conditions for women in Pakistan. Except providing more material to western world to label us as barbaric and uncivilized.
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IQRA Rasheed Oct 06, 2017 02:36pm
Heartiest Congratulations to Sharmeen and Aapa Haya.
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Anonymous Oct 06, 2017 02:50pm
@Arshad i totally agree with you
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Amer RAO Oct 06, 2017 03:06pm
Congratulations from all of us.
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talal Oct 06, 2017 05:50pm
Congratulations Sharmeen! Well done. You are an inspiration.
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Jubin Mama Oct 08, 2017 03:04am
@Faisal Azeem please recognise that there are many many evil acts of violence perpetrated by Pakistani men against defenceless Pakistani women. As a Pakistani man I am ashamed. And proud of the courage shown by this young woman who stood up to those who tried to kill her for no reason. And of Pakistani women like Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy who shines a light on the dark underside of Pakistani society and gives a voice to those who are fighting it. We should salute the service she is giving Pakistan. If you want her to stop exposing the evils of Pakistani society because it makes you feel ashamed why not play an active part in fighting it? When there are no more honour killings in Pakistan, Sharmeen can stop exposing the evil they represent
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Adil Oct 08, 2017 04:29pm
Every Documentry that shows Pakistan in bad light wins international award. The hate and bias is obvious.
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AK Oct 08, 2017 05:41pm
Sharmeen is mirror of the battered society of Pakistan. I congrats her and encourage her to heed people on such social issues.
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