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Sara Creta

Paris, France
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About Sara
Sara Creta is an Italian multimedia-journalist, specializing in coverage of humanitarian issues worldwide. With an emphasis on stories that dignify the human struggle, she works closely with NGOs and social service groups to document on-the-ground conditions in forced migration situation, human rights violation, crisis management and cultures in transition. She is fluent in multimedia techniques including audio field-recording and video production.

Recently, she was in Sudan to cover the uprising for the ARTE, a Franco-German free-to-air television network and she co-authored a 22 minutes documentary on Women’s stories from the frontline of Sudan’s revolution.

In the past, she has worked on a documentary series on migration in the Mediterranean for NRK, television in Norway; filmed at the border between Morocco and Spain with RAI, Italian television.

She has been working with the communication department and on the field with Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders in humanitarian contexts like Libya, Chad, Democratic Republic of Congo and Bangladesh. In 2016, as part of MSF’s campaign to highlight the deadly routes refugees and migrants are taking to Europe, she spent 4 months on a search and rescue vessel in the Mediterranean Sea.
Languages
Arabic Greek English
+2
Services
Video Package (Web / Broadcast) Interview (Video / Broadcast) Documentaries
+10
Skills
Politics Technology Film & Theatre
+5
Portfolio

Lives on hold: How coronavirus has affected the women porters of Melilla

15 Jul 2020  |  irishtimes.com
The coronavirus pandemic has severely impacted the women porters of Melilla, a Spanish city on Morocco's northern coast, by closing the border which is the only land route between Africa and the European Union. This has halted the 'comercio atípico', an informal trade that allowed Moroccans to carry goods into Melilla, often exploited as 'mule women' for meager earnings. The border closure has left many stranded and without income, exacerbating unemployment and poverty. Personal stories of women like Hurria, Hafiza, Jamila, and Yusra highlight the human cost of the pandemic and the uncertain future of the border trade.

UNHCR in Libya Part 4: The detention centres - the map and the stories

03 Oct 2019  |  www.euronews.com
NGO workers discovered that 11 unaccompanied minors had vanished from the Janzoor detention centre in Libya. The Libyan government acknowledged the existence of 23 detention centres, holding over 5,000 asylum seekers, but in reality, militias control these facilities. Migrants and refugees face ordeals beginning at sea, with nearly 6,000 intercepted and returned to Libya by the Libyan coast guard in 2019. Detainees have been subjected to torture, sold, or released for ransom. Despite official closures, detention centres in Misrata, Khoms, and Tajoura remain operational. The Az-Zāwiyah detention centre, now an arrest and investigation centre, is linked to human trafficking and smuggling. Refugees and migrants have been displaced or transferred due to conflict, with some recruited to assist militias in the civil war.

Search and Rescue AJ+

Search and Rescue in the Mediterranean for Channel 4.

Women’s stories from the frontline of Sudan’s revolution for ARTE.

Driven to suicide in Tunisia’s UNHCR refugee shelter

20 Mar 2019  |  aljazeera.com
In Medenine, Tunisia, refugees, including unaccompanied minors, face despair and mental health crises in a UNHCR-run facility. Incidents of self-harm and suicide attempts, such as 16-year-old Nato's wrist-slitting, highlight the lack of support and security felt by the refugees. The facility struggles to provide essential services, medical screenings, and clear information about rights in Tunisia. Refugees, including those who have escaped violence and conscription in Eritrea, are living in suspended lives with no formal work or protection system. Some have been arrested for working illegally, and the UNHCR's efforts to enhance self-reliance are seen as inadequate, with no long-term integration plans. Refugees demand medical care, support, and resettlement to third countries.
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Verified Sep 2019
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Sep 2019

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