Publish a documentary
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Video racconti di Viaggio.it publish amateur documentaries made by travelers to share their travel experiences. Do you want to publish your documentary? Send a brief description of your work and wait to receive instructions for sending the video. The documentary can be made as well as video images including photographs mounted in a slideshow. The story of the journey is the basis of the work that the site is proposed to issue, so it is essential that the documentary has a voiceover describing the images. The total duration of the video is preferable not to exceed 30 minutes, but we can also accept longer videos, our direction refers to the decline of attention that inevitably catches the viewer. Regarding the subject of the documentary, we prefer stories that show areas of the world not yet covered in our website, however, we will also be happy to publish work on existing sites and treated by other authors: our opinion is that each trip is unlike any other, because each of us sees with his own eyes.
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Newsletter
Farewell to Wangari Maathai Nobel Peace Prize in 2004
Suffering from cancer, the 'lady of the trees' has died at a hospital in Nairobi. Since 1977, when he founded the Green Belt Movement, were planted over 40 million trees across the African continent against desertification. For his commitment to a democratic Kenya, was pursued, arrested and beaten
Alta Peruvian pro-Indian officer stops a project of exploitation of gas and gets fired
The maximum leader of the Peruvian indigenous issues was dismissed. He had just lifted a decision "illegal" that would have allowed the gas giant Argentine Pluspetrol to enter the land inhabited by uncontacted tribes.
Raquel Yrigoyen Fajardo, who was head of the government in charge of indigenous affairs INDEP, has been replaced by a former lawyer who specializes in "business ethics".
Traces of uncontacted Indians in Paraguay: the tribe asked the government to intervene
After the discovery of traces that indicate the presence of a few uncontacted Indians near a ranch, the leaders of the tribe of Ayoreo have asked the government of Paraguay to stop cattle ranchers who are destroying their lands threatening the lives of their relatives Uncontacted.
The Ayoreo claim to have found out by chance of the presence of Indians on the ranch and have also come out inspections during which they found "fresh footprints and signs on the trees where their relatives had gone to look for honey."



