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Foreign film fest chiefs, directors back BIFF chief

Heads of major international film festivals and renowned Asian filmmakers have expressed support for the Busan International Film Festival (BIFF) and its director against the Busan city government's "oppression," activists said Tuesday.
  

The BIFF organizing committee has been feuding with the host city government after it demanded the resignation of the festival's executive director Lee Yong-kwan, citing "problems" found in the city's recent audit of the festival organization.
  

Lee has one year left before his second three-year term expires in February 2016.
  

The move prompted protests from the local film industry as many take it as retaliation against the director. Last year, Lee refused to accept Mayor Seo Byung-soo's request to cancel the screening of "The Truth Shall Not Sink with Sewol," also known as "Diving Bell," a controversial documentary highly critical of the government's rescue efforts during the Sewol ferry disaster that claimed more than 300 lives in April 2014.
  

"The Cannes International Film Festival fully supports BIFF and its executive director Lee Yong-kwan, putting all our honor on this," Thierry Fremaux, director of Cannes, told a task force composed of various local film industry groups opposing the authority's alleged attempt to undermine the independence of Korea's most successful festival.
  

"Outside forces should not have any influence on the programming of a film festival," he said. "A film festival should make its own decision on whether it likes a film or not."
  

Alberto Barbera, chief of the Venice International Film Festival, said that festivals exist "to respect the authors' freedom of expression, to offer them an independent space where films can be seen, discussed, sometimes even objected to, but without many form of political censorship."
  

"We are on the side of Lee and his collaborators and we hope that Korean politicians will realize that it would be a wrong choice to shut off the voice of BIFF -- a voice that, over all these years, gave an extraordinary contribution to the dissemination of Korean cinema culture throughout the world," he said.
  

Leading Asian filmmakers also followed suit.
  

"Any pressure put on BIFF is in fact pressure put on the whole cinema world," the family of the Iranian director Mohsen Makhamalbaf said in a statement. "This pressure will lead to the pain and scream of all the filmmakers across the globe," they said.
  

"For me, the festival is one of the greatest cultural assets of Korea," the Thai filmmaker Apichatpong Weerasethakul said.
  

"I hope that the Korean government considers the intervening action towards BIFF very carefully. I risks destroying a solid foundation that it has been building for the past 20 years."
  

Founded in 1996, BIFF has grown into Asia's largest film festival.
  

Lee joined as the executive programmer in the first year of the festival and later worked as a deputy director and co-director before becoming the executive director in 2010. He won a second term as director in 2013. (Yonhap)

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