I found this an interesting take on the effort to help out Darfur, perhaps one most people don't consider:[quote]Celebrities like Mia Farrow and George C..."/>
Sign Up | Log In
REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS
Darfur: Where celebrities love to tread
Friday, February 12, 2010 11:45 AM
NIKI2
Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...
Quote:Celebrities like Mia Farrow and George Clooney may have done more to prolong the suffering of Darfur than resolve the crisis in Sudan's war-torn region, a new book argues. "The Save Darfur movement with its celebrity supporters came down very clearly on one particular side of the debate," says Rob Crilly, author of Saving Darfur, Everyone's Favourite African War. "This very simple straight-forward narrative which demanded our intervention was the only view being heard," he told the BBC. Crilly arrived in East Africa as a foreign correspondent for the London-based Times newspaper in 2004, a year after the insurgency in Darfur began. His brief was to cover all of the region's brutal conflicts - Somalia, the Democratic Republic of Congo and the end of the civil war in south Sudan. 'Sexy conflict' "But it became very clear very quickly there was only one conflict that my editors wanted me to cover," he says. "As soon as I arrived I was getting calls asking me to go to Darfur - there was something very different about Darfur, something that was sexy and people were interested in." Compared with other conflicts in Africa, Darfur seemed simple: In September 2004, then-US Secretary of State Colin Powell used the word "genocide". Crilly says the conflict was portrated as "An evil government intent on destroying the rebels and their supporters. "They'd unleashed this fearsome Arab militia, the Janjaweed on a scorched-earth campaign against villagers who were supporting the rebels, so it was a very simple, clear war to understand - of good guys against bad guys. "You compare that with Somalia, where there are countless warlords and Islamist militias all fighting against each other, or the Democratic Republic of Congo which has been rumbling on for 10 years and anyone who understands those wars frankly is just boasting." But the longer he reported on the conflict, the more Crilly understood that there was nothing simple about Darfur and what he was witnessing was a tragic, complicated conflict, rather than a simplistic genocide. Unsurprisingly, Mia Farrow says she disagrees with Crilly's analysis but does commend the book for providing "a solid journalistic account of his first-hand experiences in Darfur". "The war is no longer a conventional war in the sense we'd understand - that there's one side against another," says Crilly. "It's banditry, it's insecurity, it's fractures within the Arab tribes - they've turned on each other, there are issues of grazing routes, there are issues of water desertification," he says. But it is not the publicity that celebrities bring that is the problem, he says, rather their agenda. "My concern is when they get too involved in proposing solutions and they become too wedded to one way of doing things. "I think that's a lesson for future coalitions and future advocacy campaigns - we've already starting to see coalitions for Haiti. "I think [it] is wonderful that people want to have concerts to raise awareness, raise money - but I think they shouldn't get too bogged down in policy prescriptions because they can run into trouble." He blames the Save Darfur Coalition in part for the failure of the 2006 Darfur peace agreement, which only one of the many rebel factions signed up to. "Some of the rebel leaders were very much emboldened by the support of this lobby and they still believe that the Save Darfur movement can deliver them much greater benefits." A gathering of all the different communities to discuss their grievances - while it may sound boring - would have the best hope of finding a solution, he says. "If you understand it as a black and white war between rebels and the government then all these other players are left out of the negotiations and you can't really have peace in Darfur."
Friday, February 12, 2010 12:25 PM
GINOBIFFARONI
Friday, February 12, 2010 12:46 PM
FREMDFIRMA
Friday, February 12, 2010 1:14 PM
Saturday, February 13, 2010 8:35 AM
Quote:Fidelity Investments is a major holder of PetroChina, a Chinese oil company that is one of the highest offenders in helping fund the genocide in Darfur. Divestment offers a powerful way to put economic pressure on the Sudanese government to cooperate with international efforts to end the violence in Darfur. Help cut off financial support for the government-sponsored violence in Darfur by urging Fidelity and other investment institutions to divest their holdings from any companies doing business with the government of Sudan.
Saturday, February 13, 2010 10:03 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Niki2: Gino, apparently your suggestion of divestment is already in the works...I don't know enough about the situation to guess how much good it might do, but it's all over the internet as a way to help Darfur. Certainly money talks, so maybe it will help:Quote:Fidelity Investments is a major holder of PetroChina, a Chinese oil company that is one of the highest offenders in helping fund the genocide in Darfur. Divestment offers a powerful way to put economic pressure on the Sudanese government to cooperate with international efforts to end the violence in Darfur. Help cut off financial support for the government-sponsored violence in Darfur by urging Fidelity and other investment institutions to divest their holdings from any companies doing business with the government of Sudan. http://action.savedarfur.org/campaign/fidelitydivestment existing bans prohibiting U.S. companies from conducting business operations in Sudan, public and private institutions and individuals throughout the United States are indirectly fueling the genocide by investing in foreign companies complicit in the bloodshed. Economic pressure by selling investments in the companies that benefit from genocide known as targeted divestment is a serious step to take, but the declaration of genocide in Darfur and the crimes against humanity that continue today warrant such action.
Saturday, February 13, 2010 10:11 AM
Saturday, February 13, 2010 10:43 AM
Saturday, February 13, 2010 12:00 PM
OLDENGLANDDRY
YOUR OPTIONS
NEW POSTS TODAY
OTHER TOPICS
FFF.NET SOCIAL