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Day 6 iACT8 in Darfuri refugee camp - Djabal
June 20, 2009 ~ World Refugee Day
Uploaded by stopgenocidenow
Firefox has been crashing for me all day. I can't upload pictures, because every time I try to save a picture or add a picture to this blog, Firefox shuts down. You can find the pictures here
http://www.flickr.com/photos/stopgenocidenow/3642642729/
Day 6 Action: Act in Solidarity
Today is World Refugee Day. i-ACT is providing live video feed from refugee camps in Chad and there are events all around the world to honor the lives and the daily struggles of refugees. Each moment you spend getting to know a Darfuri brings you closer to the reality of today’s theme: Real People, Real Needs.
Today we invite you to go deeper by joining Darfur Fast for Life. For at least one day, 24 hours, fast on water-only or refugee rations in solidarity with the people of Darfur. Today, even as we honor them, they have few choices compared to ours.
To learn more about refugee rations and to join Darfur Fast for Life visit the website.
Letting Go
I’m angry. And I’m tired. My mind and my heart ache. It’s always a combination out here of emotional ups and downs from being around the refugees and then being personally challenged by exhaustion. I am at the point of constantly wanting to cry, and spending energy trying to hold it back.
I am not sure that by simply sleeping I would recover. I am not sure what I need to do or how to go about getting it. I just know that I am sad and emotional.
Taking a shower is an amazing thing. It did help, and although I am not magically ready to take on the world, I feel a bit better. I cried a bit in the shower. That probably helped too.
Walking through the camp today I heard my name a lot. There are many Khadijas in this camp, but only one “Hawaji” Khadija (the white one). They just don’t stop calling my name. I think mostly it’s that it is easy to remember, and I am easy to spot. I take their pictures, show them, and chase after them. I can’t help but play with the children. Today I saw Ibrahim who I met in March.
As we walked out of the school today, a tear ran down my cheek. I wasn’t able to hold it back. I want to suck it back in, smile and continue to play, but I didn’t have the power, it had been released.
After showering, I lay on my back in the dark of our new guest house at Feed the Children I close my eyes and reflect. I can be both sensitive, and strong. I can shed tears, and work hard to bring that passion and emotion through my work to others.
The generator begins to hum and think, “My heart is not aching, it is growing bigger.”
Paz, ktj
http://www.refugeedaylive.org/
For me at this website, much of the video has no picture, but only sound. This seems to be from the parts that were video and not live streaming from today's presentation. Much of that video can be seen at http://www.stopgenocidenow.org/iact/iact7/
as well as on Youtube, such as this one:
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iACT 7, Day 6 Reunion with Adef's family March 28, 2009
Uploaded by stopgenocidenow
Test below is from Mohamed Suleiman, June 20, 2009. Mohamed is Darfuri, who has family still in Darfur being affected. Mohamed lives currently in the United States.
The IDPs (Internally Displaced People) in the refugees camps in Darfur speak out.
Leaders of refugees in IDP camps in Darfur in interviews with Radio Dabanga this morning asked The President of The United States of America Barack Obama to fire his Special Envoy General Scott Gration for his remarks on Wednesday. One leader from a camp in Zalengie (west Darfur) said since the expulsion of the NGOs "the rations are cut 50%, we live with our children under rain in torn shelters, we lack health services, how could the Special Envoys says the humanitarian conditions are improving, from where he got this 100% figure?!". Another Leader said that when Gration visited Sudan in his first trip he said that he came to learn from the Government of Sudan. The refugees' Leader said that it is evident that Gration has learned from GoS how to lie and distort facts about the humanitarian situation on the ground. The Leader challenged the Special Envoy to come to his camp or any other camp in Darfur not staged by GoS to see the real conditions for himself.
UNAMIDsaid in a statement that the incidents of attacks by armed militias against people in the IDP camps has increased dramatically. The UNAMID spokesperson Nurddin said in a separate interview to Radio Dabanga that there is serious lack of drinking water, blankets, shelter material, food, health care, and education in the IDP camps of Darfur. The spokesperson said that no one likes to live in these camps due to the bad living conditions there. He added that there is a lot to be done to improve the living situation there and/or work on the return of these refugees to their original homes.
While We Wait
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iACT 2007, Day 6
Visit to the camp primary camp
Uploaded by stopgenocidenow
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iACT 6, Day 9
The monthly food is rationed out to Darfuri refugees
August 09, 2008
Uploaded by stopgenocidenow
Darfur refugee Husna receives her food rations at Camp Oure Cassoni in Eastern Chad. For one month, she and her family of five will have to survive on:
2.5 oz of salt
6 cups of sugar
11 lbs of cereal
8 cups of oil
25 cups of yellow split peas
70 lbs of sorghum (grain)
Below is from http://www.stopgenocidenow.org/iact/iact5/
We’re Going Back
I’ve told you “we’re going back” three times in the past, but this one is a little different. The last time we left Chad after our visits to the refugee camps in the east, we left on a French military plane, being evacuated in the middle of an all out coup attempt that left an already unstable country and region in even worse conditions.
Soon after, the Sudanese government attacked Darfuri villages, displacing tens of thousands of more civilians. This was in February 2008. Of the over 13,000 that reached the border between Chad and Darfur, 8,000 are still sitting in the desert, waiting to be transferred to camp Mile, according to UNHCR. The insecurity has stopped the transfers indefinitely.
Services have been reduced and interrupted at almost all of the camps in Chad. Chadian security officers working at the camps have been attacked and killed, and humanitarian aid workers have been targets. Our friends in the camps, mostly women and children, continue to live the life of a refugee—but the life of a refugee in grave danger.
We are returning after ourselves having been in some danger. That also makes it different. Our experience at the hotel in N’Djamena had an effect on Katie-Jay and I and on all the people around us. We are not taking this lightly. We will take all precautions possible and will make decision based on the best information from experts on the ground.
We want to continue putting a face on the numbers and allowing the voice of the victims to be heard. The innocent civilians of Darfur need immediate protection, and sovereignty cannot be an excuse for inaction from the entire world.
Join us for i-ACT, staring June 10th and for twelve consecutive days of webcasts, interactive blog, and opportunities for action. Scott Warren, the outgoing National Director of STAND: A Student Anti-Genocide Coalition, and Colin O’Brien, who served as the National High School Outreach Coordinator for STAND, will be going with us on the journey. Students have been the leaders of the Darfur movement, and we are looking for students and their communities to increase the heat and raise the noise this summer to bring peace to Darfur.
Paz,
Gabriel
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iACT 6, Day 3 ~ August 02, 2008
Uploaded by stopgenocidenow
Taking matters into their own hands
Text from this video
Today was the hottest day yet in Camp Oure Cassoni. Hardly anyone was out in the heat, even as early as 9am. Even then it was only to fill their jugs with water, and quickly retreat to the shade. We met 15 women working hard to build a brick school to replace the primary school their children attend. Behind their 1/2 built structure we can see a dozen or so make shift tents with stick structures and tarps sewn together. Most are flapping in the wind and the sand has begun to strip sections of the walls and roofs. Their basketball court is cracking, and their swing set no longer has seats to rest to on. The futbol field is empty. In the furthest Zone of Oure Cassoni, you can see the harshest reality of living in this environment. The wind shifts the sand so much that building walls around your four-year old tent is not a choice, but a necessity. The sand burns to the touch, and yet more than half of the children we met wear no shoes to protect their feet. Even when the rainy season consumes the rest of the country, Camp Oure Cassoni remains a desert.
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iACT6, Day 6
Tour of the outskirts of the Darfuri refugee camp
August 08, 2008
Gabriel takes us on a drive around the outskirts of Camp Oure Cassoni, just across the border from Darfur.
Uploaded by stopgenocidenow
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President Obama's Special Envoy to Sudan Scott Gration needs to be replaced.
US Tries to Walk Back From Comments Downplaying Genocide in Darfur
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From Mohamed Suleiman
Two victims of rape still in Zalengie hospital. Raped by janjaweed using rape as a weapon to break the will of Darfur people. Government of Sudan tell the Janjaweed : You have to kill them savegly and violate their women, otherwise they will come back and claim their land.
Still bomb craters fresh in Furawiah when it was bombed just few days ago.
Gration is a hero in Khartoum. Champion of normalization.
Gration does not feel the pain of Darfur people who are still suffering from an on going Genocide.
Gration wants to redfine "Genocide".
Gration must go.
http://blogs.abcnews.com/politicalpunch/2009/06/-sudan-envoy-darfur-experiencing-remnants-of-genocide-says-aid-capacity-back-near-100.html
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I wrote the following on April 28, 2009
If Scott Gration reflects what Barack Obama believes, then I believe we have a problem. Scott Gration needs to be replaced in my opinion. We can't expect to make deals with Bashir and believe good will come of it. I am beside my self with frustration and anger.
I wrote the brief note below via http://www.whitehouse.gov/contact/
Sent April 28, 2009
As someone who went to other states to help get Barack Obama elected, even though it was outside my comfort zone to go door-to-door and phone bank, as well as give money over and over, although I couldn't afford it - I am deeply in despair over Barack Obama's failure to act appropriately regarding the Darfuris.
Scott Gration needs to be replaced as envoy to Sudan.
"US State Dept. moves toward appeasement policy with Khartoum" at
http://www.sudantribune.com/spip.php?article31006
These are my heroes:
http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2009/04/27/us-lawmakers-arrested-in-darfur-protest-at-sudan-embassy/
Write to President Obama
http://www.whitehouse.gov/contact/
You can also write to the President at:
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500
President Obama can be called:
202-456-1111
or
1-800-GENOCIDE
The White House comment line is available
9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. weekdays
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Find USA elected politicians contact information at this link:
www.usa.gov/Contact/Elected.shtml
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www.stopgenocidenow.org
www.enoughproject.org
www.savedarfur.org
www.eyesondarfur.org
whilewewaitsudan.blogspot.com
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