Wednesday, October 06, 2010

Sudan

George Clooney in Southern Sudan over War Worries
By Maggie Fick
The Huffington Post, October 6, 2010
Photo: Associated Press
"American actor George Clooney is visiting the little known region of Southern Sudan. The UN Security Council arrived to a raucous welcome on Wednesday, and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum also made a recent trip here. The high-level visits are putting the spotlight on the Texas-sized area of Sudan that is far less known to Americans than the western region of Darfur, where mass atrocities have been committed over the last decade. Southern Sudan is three months from a Jan. 9 independence vote that could see Africa's largest country break in two. The vote -- and the potential of a new north-south war because of it -- are the reason behind the rash of visits. 'If you knew a tsunami, or Katrina or a Haiti earthquake was coming, what would you do to save people?' Clooney said, according to a blog post by Ann Curry, a reporter for NBC who is accompanying Clooney. Clooney spent the past week traveling to remote, conflict-prone areas of Sudan's south with John Prendergast, the founder of the Enough Project, an anti-genocide advocacy group. One photo posted by Curry showed Clooney pointing over a field that Curry wrote was the site of a mass grave from 2008. That was in Abyei, a town that was largely burned to the ground after southern and northern armies clashed there, prompting an estimated 60,000 people to flee. The UN reported at the time that at least 140 people died. Clooney, who declined a request for comment, also visited the town of Malakal, where elements of Sudan's northern and southern armies have clashed twice since the end of the 21-year north-south civil war in 2005.
The group of Americans also talked to villagers in Lul, an area where Human Rights Watch recently documented killings and rapes by southern soldiers against civilians who opposed the ruling Sudan People's Liberation Movement. When the UN Security Council arrived Wednesday, school children lined the streets and hundreds of people at the airport chanted a greeting to America's UN ambassador, Susan Rice. The group also 'Welcome, welcome ICC,' a reference to the International Criminal Court that has indicted Sudan's president for war crimes in the western region of Darfur. Rice is known for her hardline views on how the US should deal with the northern government, which is headed by President Omar al-Bashir. The Security Council plans to meet with Southern Sudan President Salva Kiir but will not meet with al-Bashir. Members will also assess preparations for the Jan. 9 independence vote in Southern Sudan and a separate vote that day in the oil-rich region of Abyei. [...]"

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