<div class="art-title"><a href="http://www.screenafrica.com/page/news/industry/1091180-South-African-wins-ITU-award">http://www.screenafrica.com/page/news/industry/1091180-South-African-wins-ITU-award</a><br><br>South African wins ITU award</div>
<div class="date">Wed, 09 Nov 2011 12:40</div><p>Cape
Town’s Hajra Cassim is a winner in the Not-For-Profit Digital
Innovators Award at ITU Telecom World 2011, out of 45 finalists from 22
countries around the world.</p>
<p>Held at the end of October in Geneva, Switzerland, Telecom World is
one of the globe’s most important ICT events, brought together by The
United Nation’s International Telecommunication Union (ITU).</p>
<p>Cassim, a trainee director on the Film Industry Learner Mentorship
(F.I.L.M.) MICT Seta Sallywood Project, won 8 500 Swiss Francs (roughly
R75 000) for pitching the mobile-content-generation showmemobi model
to an international investment panel, global leaders in technology, and a
huge international audience via the internet.</p>
<p> At Telecom World, Cassim met the likes of UN Secretary-General Ban
Ki-Moon; Carlos Slim Helú, one of the richest men in the world; and ITU
Secretary-General, Hamadoun I. Touré</p>
<p> showmemobi is the Sallywood Project’s own mobile content channel on
the Bozza mobile content platform or mobihood (mobile neighbourhood),
launching at the end of November 2011.</p>
<p> Five-minute mobi-sodes of edutainment are written and produced by
trainees on the Sallywood Project, a MICT SETA-funded skills programme
created by F.I.L.M. to empower young media entrepreneurs.</p>
<p>“Our showmemobi pitch fortuitously captured the essence of the
entire conference, that captivating content essentially drives the
uptake of technology as the channel attracts more and more users,” says
Cassim, a former Bandwidth Barn graduate. “I love ICT and I love making
movies, so it’s the perfect way to marry my passions.”</p>
<p>In South Africa, there is over 50% youth unemployment. “Six months
ago, I was part of that statistic,” says Cassim, a single mother of a
four-year-old boy. “Through showmemobi, we want to empower people who
are marginalised to tell and sell stories through film electronic and
digital media; stories that touch and transform lives and in the
process, create employment for emerging micro-entrepreneurs who
generate the content.”</p>
<p>The average feature film costs R5m in South Africa. “Mobile jumps
the traditional barriers to entry and allows us to make films, reach an
audience and interact with them in an ongoing way via mobile,” says
Cassim. “It would take me forever to direct a feature, but now in six
months I can direct my own mobile series.”<br>
Using Nollywood’s $2bn annual industry as an example, she believes
the key is to make proudly local content in the local vernacular. “We
have 11 official languages in South Africa. I’m Indian, so mobile allows
me to make films in Hindu or Urdu, which - depending on your content -
can be hyper-localised and very niche, or totally generic.”</p>
<p>Cassim is currently developing her first series for showmemobi: Cape
Town in Joburg, which follows the journey of a rural woman who
inherits the Joburg Bar on Long Street. She plans to shoot the
five-minute mobi-sodes on her new Blackberry. “It’s mobile for mobi,”
she says.</p>
<p> F.I.L.M. project director Seton Bailey accompanied Cassim to
Geneva. He says the prize money is going to buy production equipment
for F.I.L.M. and showmemobi. He adds that meeting and working with heads
of state and other world leaders was life-changing. “Apart from the
incredible contacts, we now have a far clearer understanding of how to
pitch the huge benefits of our not-for-profit showmemobi
mobile-content-generation project to venture capitalists, angel
investors and the world,” says Bailey. “Special thanks to the MICT Seta
and ITU for laying the foundations for our future…”</p>