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Documentary produced in Echo Bay premiering in Vancouver

A song Foster wrote and produced is featured in the documentary
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SooToday received the following news release from Kerry Foster regarding a locally produced documentary, The Crimes of Jiang Zemin: 200 Thousand File for Official Investigation.

Foster recently co-produced a 30-minute radio documentary with Simon Fraser University in her home studio in Echo Bay. A song she also wrote and produced is featured in the documentary.

The documentary is scheduled for airing this Monday, Jan. 30 at 10 a.m. on CJSF 90.1 FM in Vancouver. 

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CJSF 90.1 FM now has a new format for its Spoken Word programming. Speak Up! is CJSF's new daily, one-hour magazine-style radio show that will feature volunteer-made, in-house talk and public affairs programming interspersed with music.

To mark the launch of Speak Up!, CJSF will air a week of Making Time for Radio documentaries beginning Monday, Jan. 30 and ending Friday, Feb. 3. A mix of previously-broadcast and brand-new content, this series of documentaries can be heard on Speak Up! as well as the rest of CJSF’s Spoken Word programming lineup, including SFU Issues and Ideas (I&I), IntraVenus and The Arts Show.

Speak Up! Gives CJSF volunteers a chance to exercise their own voice to share the ideas, personalities and stories that they are passionate about.

The programs weaves together community headlines and weather, interviews and roundtable discussions, documentary-style storytelling and investigative journalism, keeping audiences informed, entertained, and up-to-date with our community.

Want to get involved with Speak Up! Or CJSF’s other public affairs & talk programming? Sit in, co-host a show or get started producing segments by getting in touch with Jesse Wentzloff, CJSF’s Public Affairs & Talk coordinator at cjsfpa@sfu.ca.

About the documentary

The Crimes of Jiang Zemin: 200 Thousand File for Official Investigation is a soul-stirring account of 3 women who were brutally tortured in Chinese prisons because they refused to give up their practice of Falun Dafa.  

After narrowly escaping being killed for their organs, they fled to Canada and joined the worldwide movement to bring former head of the Chinese Communist Party, Jiang Zemin, to justice.  

Co-producer Kerry Foster is a singer-songwriter and human rights writer living in Echo Bay Ontario. Returning to the Ancient Home, a song featured in the documentary, is the first piece she recorded in her home studio. Husband Ian Dunlop is sound-engineer and also co-producer of the documentary.

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