Posts Tagged ‘Darfur’

VIDEO: Inside George Clooney’s Bathroom

March 17th, 2009

Never let it be said that George Clooney was afraid of roughing it. Also, never let it be said that George had no problem complaining on videotape about having to rough it.

While in the town of Goz Beida, on the border of African nations Chad and Sudan, where the Oscar-winning actor and director has been touring to bring attention to the human rights atrocities in Sudan’s Darfur region, he took a minute out from trying to change the world so he could shoot a video diary about his less-than-4-star lavatory.

SCROLL DOWN TO SEE THE VIDEO

"That’s the water bucket you use to flush the toilet," a grizzled Clooney grumbles to the camera. And pointing to a bit of red rubber tubing, he smirks, "The hose here… That’s the shower… Nice."

Ultimately, the video devolves into George suddenly breaking into an impersonation of 60 Minutes‘ master of complaints Andy Rooney… Maybe you should just watch for yourself:


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Clooney Maintains Dismal View of Darfur

March 4th, 2009

George Clooney is blogging about the ongoing situation in Darfur, but if you’re expecting a resounding positive cheer from the actor, think again.

The Michael Clayton star acknowledges the recent indictment against Sudan’s president for crimes against humanity as "a small window of hope," but says he has little faith that the world will bring him to justice.

"Will his government turn him over? Not likely," Clooney writes. "Will the UN go in after him? Doubtful. Even if he’s caught travelling outside the safety of his country would his government be much better with other equally dangerous leaders like “The Sudanese Six”—Harun, Taha, Kushayb, Hilal, Minawi? If I were a refugee I wouldn’t bet my life on it."

Read Clooney’s entire blog about Darfur below:

 

"Last week, I visited a camp in Chad—a camp of about 12,000 refugees and internally displaced persons. I was there three years ago. The violence there is nowhere near the scale that is going on just miles across the border in Sudan.

I think what was most disturbing about the place was how little it had changed. "Normal" is 800 calories a day, sickness, threats of rebel violence, or just crime. When you see their faces, the hope that was there three years ago was all but gone. There are still moments. We walked through a village where children would follow me and chant the name “Obama.” His promise of “hope” having such a different meaning here. But there’s too little hope. Time and time again they’ve seen the convoy of white trucks and even whiter faces pull up, drag out their camera crew and pull aside the most damaged family they can find. We film them as they give honest answers to questions no person should have to answer. “What happened?” “How did you lose that arm?” “Were you raped?” “By how many?” Then, just as they’ve seen time and time again, we jump back in our vehicles and run to the next place. “Not really tragic enough,” is said out loud (probably by me). “Maybe there’s somebody that’s been attacked more recently.” It’s all been covered before.

UN go in after him? Doubtful.

I stopped on the side of the road on the way back to my fenced-in shelter to talk to a waif of a girl who surely was raped. But the answer was “no.” She was just sick and alone and scared. Not great headline grabbing stuff.

We all meet back up that night to assess. “Not much new.” “What’s the hook?” “What makes it fresh?” These are all the best intentions. Finding a new outrage is the only way to catch the world’s attention. You spend your time looking for (and even secretly hoping for) something or someone tragic to report. A good personal story to get the attention away from what dominates our days and nights. The economy. Iraq. Ponzi schemes. The Oscars.

 

We all know why we’re here and it’s not simply to report the status quo. Even though this status quo is beyond the pale of what is acceptable. It’s beyond our understanding of how much a person can take.

Nothing new to report—except the shame of what man can do to man. And the secret seems to be that the longer it goes on, the more tolerant all of us become of it.

And yet, in the middle of all of this, we get a tiny window of hope. The International Criminal Court has now brought charges and an arrest warrant to Omar al-Bashir, the president of Sudan. He is indicted for crimes against humanity. It’s the first time a sitting president has been charged by The Hague. By the time the ICC got to them, Slobodan Milosevic and Charles Taylor were both finished with their reign of terror. Omar al-Bashir is not. Not by a long shot.

 

How effective these indictments will be is now in the hands of the rest of the world. Will his government turn him over? Not likely. Will the UN go in after him? Doubtful. Even if he’s caught travelling outside the safety of his country would his government be much better with other equally dangerous leaders like “The Sudanese Six”—Harun, Taha, Kushayb, Hilal, Minawi? If I were a refugee I wouldn’t bet my life on it.

So then why is this such a significant moment? Because it tells the 300,000 brutally killed and 2.5 million displaced and raped and maimed that justice must always prevail. That the rest of the world sees their struggle and stands up and demands justice.

 

This is the moment. And if the UN can’t use it to insist on tougher sanctions, and the United States can’t use it to pressure China, and China can’t feel the eyes of the world looking to them for leadership in the country that they profit so greatly from, then the court and the rule of international law is lost.

Now we have a headline: PRESIDENT OF SUDAN INDICTED

No need for sad stories of starving children or heartstirring pictures of a baby koala bear with burnt paws drinking from a water bottle.

Instead, millions of voices standing and demanding “JUSTICE!”

I visited a school in a camp in Goz Beida. The name above the door had been changed to “Obama.”

It seems this message of ‘hope’ is catching on."

 

 

Angelina Talks About Her Pregnancy

April 9th, 2008

She has never confirmed that she is pregnant, but on Tuesday, Angelina Jolie revealed during the middle of a conference on education policy in Iraq that she "felt kicking suddenly in the middle of the event."

It’s quite an admission from the expecting mother of four, who has quietly continued her busy life–happy not to acknowledge her growing baby bump. But on Tuesday, Jolie said she’s savoring this period–unexpected kicks and all–adding "It’s a very special time in our lives."

Angie is in Washington D.C. to promote education among Iraqi children. Specifically, she is there to launch her new initiative, Education Partnership for Children of Conflict.

Jolie brought her two sons, Maddox,6, and Pax,4, with her to the nation’s captiol. She will remain in D.C. for the rest of the week before re-joining Brad Pitt and their daughters Zahara,3, and Shiloh,1.

Angelina Promotes Education for Iraqi Children

April 8th, 2008 / Author: OK! Staff

Angelina Jolie is in Washington, D.C., where, on Monday night, she presented her friend, Mariane Pearl, wife of slain journalist Daniel Pearl, with an award for outstanding leadership.

Pearl accepted the Fern Holland Award from a glowingly pregnant Jolie at the Vital Voices Global Leadership Awards Gala at the Kennedy Center.

During her acceptance speech, Pearl, whose life was portrayed by Jolie on screen in A Mighty Heart, called the actress a "sister," and told the audience the two had spent the day together with their children, Maddox, Pax and Adam.

Angie presented other awards, along with First Lady Laura Bush, to six individuals for their outstanding humanitarian efforts. The 32-year-old mother of four arrived in the nation’s capitol on Monday to promote her latest effort — urging the international community to make educating Iraqi children a priority.

"The best way to heal children of conflict from trauma is to have them focus on their future," Jolie told the Council on Foreign Relations on Tuesday.

The event was to help launch the actress’s new venture, the Education Partnership for Children of Conflict, which will focus on the work of prominent charity organizations as well as tell the stories of the children in need.

"Every child has a right to education and conflict is not a reason to ignore that," Jolie said.

Angie visited Iraq last August and has traveled to more than 2o humanitarian hot spots, including Sudan’s Darfur region since becoming a goodwill U.N. ambassador in 2001.

Clooney Talks Darfur With British Prime Minister

April 8th, 2008 / Author: cwillett

George Clooney took a break from promoting his latest film, Leatherheads, on Tuesday to take a meeting with British Prime Minister, Gordon Brown. The subject  — convincing governments to speak out about China’s foreign policy in Sudan.

The two met as the Olympic torch arrived in San Francisco for the only North American stop in the Beijing Olympic torch relay, which has been dogged by human rights protesters in London, Paris and Istanbul.

The protests have been fueled by anger over China’s human rights record, its grip on Tibet and China’s support for Sudan despite years of bloodshed in the country’s western Darfur region. China is a major trading partner with Sudan, and Beijing has resisted United Nations attempts to force Sudan to accept U.N. peacekeepers in Darfur.

"I think the protests are good. They’ve beeen warned for a while that there was going to be some protests," Clooney told reporters on the red carpet for the British premiere of Leatherheads. Brown praised the 46-year-old actor’s role in drawing attention to violence in Darfur.

The AP reports only 9,200 troops and police of the 26,000 authorized are on the ground in Darfur, where violent conflict since 2003 has displaced some 4.27 million civilians and left more than 200,000 people dead.

 

”The situation in Darfur is unacceptable,” Brown said after a meeting with Clooney, announced only after it took place.

”The rebels and government continue to openly flout United Nations Security Council resolutions through attacks on civilians,” Brown said in a statement.

Brown praised Clooney’s role ”in drawing attention to this crisis — this is a humanitarian tragedy of colossal proportions and the world must take note and act.”

Clooney — who has been named a UN peace envoy — has publicly spoken several times about the crisis in Darfur.

Brown said Britain was working with the international community and others to pressure all sides in the conflict to agree to a cease fire, start peace talks and allow peacekeepers to deploy.

Hollywood Stars: Making a Difference in Darfur

March 28th, 2008

Financial contributions from Europe and a charity co-founded by Hollywood actors George Clooney, Brad Pitt, Don Cheadle and Matt Damon will help maintain humanitarian flights in Darfur through April, the United Nations said on Friday.

The $6 million donated by Ireland, the European Union and the Clooney backed Not On Our Watch Charity will allow the U.N.’s World Food Program (WFP) to hire helicopters and other aircraft to ferry aid workers to Sudan’s war torn region for 30 more days.

"We’ve received some funds which will allow us to maintain the flights for the month of April," WFP spokeswoman Christiane Berthiaume said on Friday. "It is vital to maintain the service especially at a time when insecurity still reigns."

The western Sudanese region of Darfur is the site of the world’s largest aid operation. International experts estimate five years of conflict have killed 200,000 people and driven 2 1/2 million people from their homes.

George and Friends Donate Big Bucks to Darfur

March 13th, 2008 / Author: cwillett

A charitable group co-founded by Hollywood A-listers George Clooney, Don Cheadle, Brad Pitt and Matt Damon announced on Thursday it had given $500,ooo to the United Nations World Food Program to help stop hunger in Darfur.

The WFP uses helicopters to send support people and food to Northern Sudan and more specifically into the Darfur region that, over recent years, has seen a giant influx of refugees in the war ravaged area.

 

"Without immediate additional funding, humanitarian aid in the region will be crippled," Clooney said in a statement obtained by the A.P.

 

This is not the first time the Clooney-backed charitable group, known as Not On Our Watch, has donated money to the U.N. group. Friends of the World Food Program — a nonprofit group that helps build support for the WFP — said Not On Our Watch gave $1 million to the WFP in 2007.

Earlier this month, Drew Barrymore also donated $1 million of her own money to the WFP in an effort to stop world hunger.

 

The WFP reportedly needs to make $77 million in 2008 to sustain its operations.

Darfur has been at the center of a bloody conflict between the Sudanese government, and non-Arab rebels. Experts believe some 200,000 people have died in the conflict and 2.5 million have been driven from their homes since fighting began in 2003.

 

George Clooney the Humanitarian

December 13th, 2007 / Author: cwillett

On Thursday at a conference of Nobel peace laureates in Rome, Ocean’s 11 co-stars George Clooney and Don Cheadle received the Peace Summit Award for their efforts to bring awareness to the ongoing genocide in the Darfur region of Sudan.

The actors, who founded the Not On Our Watch charity, hope to shed light on the more than 200,000 people who have been killed in the Sudanese conflict. "We have an American election coming," George said after receiving the award. "So this is the time to put pressure on American candidates, because believe me none of these people want to talk about this issue."

George also pointed out that, despite the millions of dollars he’s been able to raise for aid to those affected by the horrors in Darfur, things have sadly not yet improved. "We stand before you as failures," he explained. "The simple truth is that when it comes to the atrocities in Darfur those people are not better off now than they were years ago. The murders continue, the rapes continue and some two and a half million refugees are yet to go home."

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