The Punishment photograph

The Punishment

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Initial release 1962
Directors Jean Rouch
Producers Pierre Braunberger
Reviews www.imdb.com
Cast Óscar Sinela
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID3030652
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About The Punishment


Nadine has to sit by the high school doors.

Awaab Ishak: Family demands 'punishment' for boy's mould death

Awaab Ishak: Family demands 'punishment' for boy's mould death
Nov 17,2023 2:41 am

...The father of a toddler who died from a respiratory condition caused by mould has said he wants those responsible " to get The Punishment they deserve"...

Kenya's school floggings: The children suffering from a hidden epidemic

Kenya's school floggings: The children suffering from a hidden epidemic
Oct 29,2023 9:21 pm

... Caleb says in his case it was Nancy Gachewa, the director of Gremon Education Centre - a school in the town of Bamburi near Mombasa - who first beat him and then ordered other students to continue The Punishment...

Pakistan police bust organ trafficking ring that took kidneys from hundreds

Pakistan police bust organ trafficking ring that took kidneys from hundreds
Oct 2,2023 3:51 pm

... The Punishment for those caught includes a decade-long jail term and huge fines in the hope that this will stop sales to overseas clients by exploitative doctors, middlemen, recipients and donors...

Ogmore: 2,000 tyres, 100 trolleys and fridge fished out of river

Ogmore: 2,000 tyres, 100 trolleys and fridge fished out of river
Aug 30,2023 2:41 pm

... " If they do do it and get caught, they actually get The Punishment they deserve...

Report due on groping allegation MP Chris Pincher

Report due on groping allegation MP Chris Pincher
Jul 5,2023 1:10 pm

... Sources familiar with the process said they expected The Punishment to meet the threshold for a recall petition...

NHS whistleblowers need more protection, expert warns

NHS whistleblowers need more protection, expert warns
Jul 2,2023 9:50 pm

... " My concern about doing this interview is that they would find out who I was and then The Punishment that would come my way - because I m absolutely certain punishment would come, " Dr A says...

Colorado Club Q shooting: Attacker pleads guilty to murder and attempted murder

Colorado Club Q shooting: Attacker pleads guilty to murder and attempted murder
Jun 26,2023 1:50 pm

... Ashley Paugh s father Curt asked the court: " Why isn t The Punishment harsher? " " He gets to breathe air, eat three meals a day, " he said, adding that Aldrich should " rot in loneliness and hate"...

Alfie Steele: The sports-mad boy killed by brutal punishments

Alfie Steele: The sports-mad boy killed by brutal punishments
Jun 13,2023 10:30 am

... The Punishment for not following Howell s instructions was nothing short of cruel - the 41-year-old admitted that himself in court...

NHS whistleblowers need more protection, expert warns

Jun 11,2023 10:10 pm

By Dominic HughesHealth correspondent, Bbc News

Protections for NHS staff to speak Out about wrongdoing may be insufficient to prevent another big scandal like that at The Mid Staffordshire hospital trust, an expert has told Bbc News .

Sir Robert Francis led The Inquiry into hundreds of patient deaths at Stafford Hospital More Than a decade ago.

He says despite subsequent attempts to encourage whistleblowing, some still pay a heavy price for Speaking Up .

And this victimisation discourages others from coming forward.

The NHS National Guardian Dr Jayne Chidgey-Clark, whose job it is to protect whistleblowers in England, also says too many managers in The health service are still not protecting those who raise concerns from victimisation or bullying.

A record number of More Than 25,000 NHS whistleblowers came forward Last Year - up by a quarter on The Year before - raising Issues such as patient safety and bullying.

Tristan Reuser, a senior eye surgeon at The main hospital trust in Birmingham, became a whistleblower when he complained about a lack of nursing staff, after he felt he had to use a non-medical colleague to help with an urgent operation.

But instead of addressing The issue, Management turned on him, he tells Bbc News .

" If you whistleblow, you criticise, essentially, Systems - Systems designed by senior Management , " Mr Reuser says.

" So you criticise senior Management - and if you're in The Position of a senior manager, you don't like that. So What can we do about this? "

Mr Reuser was investigated, suspended And Then sacked and reported to The General Medical Council - which found there was no case to answer.

A subsequent employment tribunal found he had been unfairly dismissed.

Mr Reuser seems robust - But asked how he had coped with The emotional burden of The Investigation , The GMC case, The Employment tribunal, he falters.

" It was pretty bad, " he says. " And at times, I thought this is The End of it. "

There is a long pause as he gathers himself.

" It's tough, career-changing, " he says. " Sometimes for Some People , I'm sure, life-changing. "

Asked if, like some others who have spoken to Bbc News he had thought about suicide, Mr Reuser says: " I've had those thoughts, yup. But you know, a supportive wife makes it go away. "

A University Hospitals Birmingham official says The Trust takes safety concerns raised by staff seriously.

It accepted and apologised for errors made in Mr Reuser's case But said it had acted in The interest of patient welfare.

Like every NHS trust in England, UHB employs freedom-to-speak-up guardians to help whistleblowers be heard.

This system was Set Up in The Wake of The Mid Staffordshire scandal that saw hundreds of patient deaths due to poor care between 2005 and 2009.

But when Sir Robert is asked whether he is confident it will prevent another catastrophe, he says: " Am I confident, 100%? No.

" There is a danger of it happening again when pressures similar to those that existed at The Time of Mid Staffs come about.

" But I think The Way to stop it is to think all The Time about The culture and make sure you've got an open culture, a supportive one And One that treats The patient first by listening to The staff's concerns about them. "

Being victimised

Failing to listen to staff concerns is often A Sign of poor leadership, Sir Robert tells Bbc News .

" Principally, it is a matter of The Leadership of The organisations, " he says, " because The Leadership , by which I mean The Chief executive, The board, have to buy into and understand what this is all about.

" And probably people at that Level - of a certain Type - find it difficult to Let Go of control And One of The things about allowing people to Speak Up is. . you're not entirely in control. "

One of The problems reporting on this story is finding people willing to speak publicly about their experiences.

Many of those who did speak to Bbc News did not want to be identified - They spoke of being victimised and isolated at work, of The Risk that, like Mr Reuser, They could be referred to The medical regulator or lose their jobs and careers.

And many spoke of a climate of fear.

'Absolutely horrendous'

Dr A, so terrified of Management reprisals Bbc News has had to disguise their identity, also raised Issues around patient safety only to find themselves being investigated.

" I've had sleeping difficulties, I've had counselling - it's been absolutely horrendous, " Dr A says.

" It really has been a dismantling of me as a person - it's made me more fearful, more anxious. "

And The culture in their hospital is best described as " Management by fear".

" My concern about doing this interview is that They would find Out who I was And Then The Punishment that would come My Way - because I'm absolutely certain punishment would come, " Dr A says.

" It Comes straight from The Top - it's from The executive team.

" They have been instrumental in causing it But yet They are tasked with trying to sort it Out - and that cannot be The case. "

Dr Chidgey-Clark says The main healthcare regulator - The Care Quality Commission (CQC) - and Nhs England itself could do more to protect individual whistleblowers and rein in rogue managers.

" I do call on them to do everything They can within their power to ensure there is accountability and these serious Issues are looked into, " she says, " because without that, more high-profile cases will happen and, potentially, more patient harm and worker harm will happen. And in our society, in our healthcare system, we don't want to see that.

" Nobody should suffer for doing The Right thing. "

Nhs England admits too many staff remain afraid to raise Issues - But , an official says, it wants all employees to feel They work in an organisation where their voices count.

The CQC, meanwhile, tells Bbc News it examines how all hospital trusts respond to whistleblowers, as part of its inspection regime - and for any trust to restrict this information would be absolutely unacceptable.

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Source of news: bbc.com

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