|
GEORGE
CLOONEY took a break from promoting his latest film
Tuesday to meet with British Prime Minister Gordon
Brown, as he continued pressing 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.
“I think
the protests are good. They’ve been warned for a while
that there was going to be some protests,” Clooney told
reporters on the red carpet for the British premiere of
his new film Leatherheads.
Brown
praised the 46-year-old actor’s role in drawing
attention to violence in Darfur.
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.
Brown
agreed the deployment was moving too slowly, and that
humanitarian-aid efforts were being hampered by poor
access for aid workers.
“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 UNSC
[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, where
more than 200,000 people have been killed and about 2.5
million people displaced in three years of fighting
between African rebels and government troops allied with
Arab militia known as janjaweed.
China
is a major trading partner with Sudan, and Beijing has
resisted United Nations attempts to force
Sudan
to accept UN peacekeepers 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.
Fighting
in Darfur began in 2003 when ethnic African tribesman
took up arms, complaining of decades of discrimination
by Sudan’s Arab-dominated government. The government is
accused of unleashing militia forces to commit
atrocities against ethnic African communities in the
fight with rebel groups.
--AP |