Kenya

FilmAid Kenya featured on CNN’s Inside Africa

Storytelling is the most powerful force challenging outdated narratives

In December 2018, CNN International’s program Inside Africa explored the people and powerful impact of FilmAid Kenya’s Media Entrepreneurship Training courses in Dadaab and Kakuma Refugee Camp.  

FilmAid Kenya’s training course consists of a 12 month period of course work and practical training, serving 80-120 youth every year. Students gain skills in film, photography, journalism, radio, digital media and entrepreneurship, allowing them to access the invaluable creative and technical skills needed to explore issues within their communities and to express themselves creatively. For the past 12 years, FilmAid Kenya has hosted a film festival that showcases the students’ work alongside international features and shorts by, or about, refugees and other displaced people.

In this episode, CNN Inside Africa follows FilmAid’s students and graduates as they take their filmmaking journey from inspiration to exhibition.

Along the journey you will meet some extra special FilmAid graduates - the dynamic duo Amina Rwimo and Abdul Patient, founders of the production studio Exile Key Films - during the making of the Sukar Music Video by artists Mercy Akuot & Scoobylincos.

Amina and Abdul use their own independently produced work to empower, educate and impact their audiences about the realities, both hopeful and heartrending, that many refugees face. Their ambition and subsequent success has taken the duo many places. Amina and Abdul’s film It has Killed My Mother has won several festival awards including: best picture, best screenplay and best actress, and best emerging filmmaker at the IOM Global Migration Film Festival in Geneva. In June 2018, Amina took the stage at TEDx Kakuma Camp, the first TEDx event hosted in a refugee camp, with refugees, and for refugees (watch her full talk here). This January 2019, Abdul traveled to Davos for the World Economic Forum, as part of the media team of videographers, to document the yearly gathering that brings together leaders of global society.

The episode also follows Mercy Akuot, a talented musician, outspoken activist and refugee from South Sudan. In 2017, Mercy’s outstanding voice and stage presence drew the attention of FilmAid and the renowned Kenyan R&B and reggae producer Wyre. This lead to the launch of the FilmAid project ‘Finding A Star’, a talent scouting programme promoting youth economic empowerment through video and music. The project resulted in the production of the music album From Kakuma to the World and several music videos, one of them being the Sukar. Like Amina, Mercy was also selected as a TEDx Kakuma Camp speaker where she shared her grueling story of being married off to an uncle as a teenager (watch the full talk here).

Mercy Akout (left), Amina Rwimo and Abdul Patient behind the scenes during the making of the ‘Sukar’ Music Video

Mercy Akout (left), Amina Rwimo and Abdul Patient behind the scenes during the making of the ‘Sukar’ Music Video

While the episode aired on CNN International last December, we are now excited to finally share the full episode with you!

Promoting Equity in Education through Film

FilmAid Kenya is producing three short films about access to quality education in Northern Kenya, an area that continues to exhibit extensively lower participation and completion rates, particularly for girls.  


The three films tackle the following:

  1. Chore Burden – A fictional short film about how girls attending school in Turkana and Dadaab are often unable to complete homework due to the burden of household chores, while boys are left to do their homework and take part in recreational activities.

  2. Economic value of educating girls – A short fictional film that explores the positive effects and economic return of investing in educating girls.

  3. Men and boy promoters of girl education – A short documentary film showcasing a number of testimonials by influential men who support girls’ education with the aim of challenging opinions which hamper access of education for girls.

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Following the completion of the films, these powerful stories will be shared with Kenyan and refugee communities through film-based workshops, mobile evening screenings and SMS outreach. The communications campaign will aim to creating spaces where new skills are acquired and dialogue where existing attitudes and practices around equity in education are questioned.

The films are being produced and distributed in partnership with the World University Service of Canada (WUSC-EUMC) and Windle International Kenya.

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Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision (VMMC) Activation in Turkana

FilmAid Kenya is implementing an innovative social marketing project on the benefits of Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision (VMMC) in 24 locations around Turkana County, Kenya.

The project is providing information on VMMC to communities directly, through interactive face–to-face dialogue initiated by the screening of the short FilmAid produced film ‘Heroic Cut’. Video initiated dialogue is being complemented with radio and public address announcement and mini road shows.

The FilmAid produced short film ‘Heroic Cut’ being screening in Turkana County

The FilmAid produced short film ‘Heroic Cut’ being screening in Turkana County

VMMC is an effective biomedical intervention that has been proven to reduce the risk of female-to-male HIV transmission by up to 60 percent. The Turkana community is traditionally do not practice circumcision and uptake by men 25-29 years has been generally low.


This project is funded by  Population Services Kenya and supported by AMREF Kenya, Nyanza Reproductive Health, Kakuma Mission Hospital, the Catholic Church, AIC Mission and Turkana County Health Ministry.  

FilmAid staff Moses Epem facilitates a mobile screening at a hall in Lowarengak settlement, Turkana.

FilmAid staff Moses Epem facilitates a mobile screening at a hall in Lowarengak settlement, Turkana.


Watch ‘Heroic Cut’!